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Bridging Barriers with Migrant Youth

Bridging Barriers with Migrant Youth. A Presentation of Engaged Scholarship Focused on Educational Equity Dr. Maria Timmons Flores TESOL / Bilingual Education – Woodring College. Bridging Barriers with Migrant Youth.

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Bridging Barriers with Migrant Youth

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  1. Bridging Barriers with Migrant Youth A Presentation of Engaged Scholarship Focused on Educational Equity Dr. Maria Timmons Flores TESOL / Bilingual Education – Woodring College

  2. Bridging Barriers with Migrant Youth Migrant youth face many barriers in their pursuit of a quality education. They come from families who are poor and are often socially marginalized due to language, culture, mobility and immigration status. The Bilingual Pathways Initiative began with the Participatory Action Research question: What are the barriers to access that migrant/bilingual students face, and how can we work together to bridge them?This presentation will begin with the barriers migrant students face, then will highlight the programmatic bridges developed by students and their advocates including Leadership Conferences, Cross Age Tutoring, Cascading Mentorship, and Service Learning.

  3. “Every time we sit at a table to enjoy the fruits and grain and vegetables from our good earth, remember that they come from the work of men and women and children who have been exploited for generations.” ~ César Chávez, Co-Founder, United Farm Workers

  4. Participatory Action Research What are the barriers to access that migrant/bilingual students face, and how can we work together to bridge them? Barriers to Educational Access WWU MYLC Building Bridges with Migrant Youth HS Class Latinos in Action MS Afterschool Program Migrant Leadership

  5. Who are the migrant workers? • Global phenomena • US Migrant Farmworkers come from many cultural backgrounds: Hmong, Japanese, and Russian Immigrants, Native American, and US born from European Descendants. • The Students in this Partnership: Largely Latino, many from indigenous communities in Latin America Mix of Newcomers, Long Term Residents, and US Citizens Immigration status may vary even within one family Vast majority are either Bilingual or Trilingual

  6. US Federal Migrant Education Program To Qualify for Migrant Status: A student whose family moves for the purposes of work in agriculture or fishing, at least once in a 3 year period. Benefits: Medical & Dental National Database for School Records Family Liaison and / or Graduations Specialists Migrant Youth Leadership Program College Access for Migrant Program

  7. Barriers to Educational Access & Equity The Achievement Gap The Opportunity Gap

  8. Ireland, L. (2009). Graduation and Dropout Statistics for Washington in 2007-08. Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction. Olympia, WA

  9. Invisibility According to the Migrant Education Program (MEP), this district has 104 students identified as migrant and likely has a much larger population if the district collaborated with MEP to identify them.

  10. Barriers to Educational Access & Equity “Among the children of immigrants, one of the populations placed at greatest risk of not finishing high school are the children of migrant farmworkers. Although it is difficult to track graduation rates for migrant students because of their mobility, the U.S. Department of Education estimates that only half of all the migrant children finish high school.” Gibson, Margaret A., & Hidalgo, Nicole D. (2009). Bridges to success in high school for migrant youth. Columbia University :Teachers College Record, 111, 683-711.

  11. Barriers: The Opportunity Gap • Poverty • Mobility • Cultural Differences • Language Viewed as Problem to overcome • Institutional Knowledge • Immigration Status - FEAR • Invisibility – Safety to Tell Their Story • Lack of Understanding: Schools & Families

  12. If you really knew me…. Made by the Migrant Leaders from La Venture & Mt. Baker Middle Schools With their teacher and advocates To help their teachers understand why sometimes their homework was not done or they seemed distracted in class…..

  13. Contribution to Family Children play a central role in the family, working both in and outside the home. In these harsh economic times, I have more students dropping out much earlier to work. They are leaving school at 12 and 13 to work full time because their families can not survive without their labor. MS Migrant Graduation Specialist

  14. Family First • You have to understand that family comes first in my community. We have a long tradition of working the earth and a pride in the knowledge we have passed on from each generation. In my culture, you also respect your parents and your family comes before anything. It is not that my parents don’t value education. They do and they want me to be successful, but family will always come first. ~ A WWU Mixteco Student

  15. Giving Back Why do you continue to work so hard to succeed in school despite the challenges? • So I can help my family. • So I can give back to my community. • I am one of the privileged ones, I need to pass that on. • My mom worked so hard for me, she gave up her home, her country, her friends, so I could have a better life here.

  16. Bridges: The Design Principles • Understand the Challenges Students Face • Affirm Language and Culture as Assets • Support Academic Language Development • Recognize Resources within Communities • Cultivate Opportunities for Success • Build Positive Relationships • Provide Support to Navigate Institutions • Keep Hope Alive through Action • Build Partnerships with Parents

  17. WWU Initiatives • Migrant Youth Leadership Conference • TESL 497 Building Bridges with Migrant Youth • Service Learning in Migrant Communities • Youth Community Action Projects • AmeriCorps Retention Project Specialist

  18. WWU Migrant Youth Leadership Conferences • Who: 100 students, 25 teachers & community advocates, 60 WWU students, 20 WWU Faculty • When: November & March • What: Experiential Leadership Curriculum Workshops Designed to Bridge Barriers Faculty Information Fair Affirm Language & Culture as Assets

  19. TESL 497: Bridging Barriers with Migrant Youth • Research & practice related to supporting students from migrant backgrounds • Planning and teaching the MYLC • Service learning in our partner programs • Cultivating mentoring / advocacy skills • Developing Critical Inquiry • Cascading Mentorship

  20. Youth Community Action ProjectMS Migrant Leadership Project GOAL: Educating Teachers & Community About the Experiences of Immigrant Youth • Papers: Public Showings & DREAM Act Talk • If You Really Knew Me: What I would tell teachers if I felt safe. • Theatre of the Oppressed: Naming & Addressing Challenges / Biases • Anthology of Stories of Immigration: Turning Pain into Power

  21. MYL Benefits • Safe Space for Sharing & Asking Questions • Academic Language & Literacy Development Embedded in Engaging Learning • Agency: Identify challenges and means of addressing them. • Turning Pain into Power • Sustaining Relationships with Teachers / Mentors • Positive Cultural and Academic Identities • School Retention & Success

  22. Youth Community Action ProjectLatinos in Action • Academic HS Course • Introduction to Theory, Practice, Professionalism and Equity in Education • Places Bilingual HS Students in Elementary Classrooms as Teaching Assistants • Provides Leadership Opportunities in Community • College Course Alignment & Credit

  23. Opportunity to Lead

  24. Benefits to StudentsPESB: Recruiting Washington Teachers Evaluation • Academic language and literacy development embedded in meaningful and challenging work. • Provides a community of support with peers. • Both course readings and experiences affirm language and culture as assets, personally and professionally. • Being a role model for younger students motivates LIA students to do well academically. • Teaching younger students provides authentic responsibility and professional development.

  25. Benefits (cont.) • Service experience provides opportunities for LIA students to interact with professionals in both schools and in the community. • The students’ accomplishments have inspired a shift in teachers’/community’s perspectives of Latino students’ as leaders. • The course provides first generation high school graduates / college students exposure to higher education options and support to gain access to college. • The LIA course has created new school identities that support students to succeed without giving up their culture, language, family or community. • The course offers a school identity that is respected and valued by peers.

  26. From Heroic Effort to the Heart of Education • Understand the Challenges Students Face • Affirm Language and Culture as Assets • Support Academic Language Development • Recognize Resources within Communities • Cultivate Opportunities for Success • Build Positive Relationships • Provide Support to Navigate Institutions • Keep Hope Alive through Action • Build Partnerships with Parents

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