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Barriers to high-school completion among immigrant and later-generation Latinos in the USA: Language, ethnicity and socioeconomic status
Oleh:
Lutz, Amy
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Ethnicities vol. 07 no. 03 (Sep. 2007)
,
page 323–342.
Topik:
bilingualism
;
educational attainment
;
USA
Fulltext:
323.pdf
(186.0KB)
Isi artikel
This article examines high-school completion among key Latino immigration groups in the USA, with a particular focus on the impacts of ethnicity, generation, language proficiencies, family structure and socioeconomic status. Family socioeconomic status has by far the largest impact on high-school completion. Poverty presents a persistent and daunting problem in high-school non-completion in the USA and is a primary contributor to Latino highschool non-completion. Addressing the issue of poverty is particularly important in the case of Mexicans, who make up the largest proportion of the immigrant population and whose levels of high-school completion are significantly lower than those of other groups. This research also highlights the impact of Spanish maintenance on high-school completion and indicates that high-level proficiency in both Spanish and English is associated with a greater likelihood to complete high school than Non-Hispanic whites when controlling for socioeconomic status and other variables. Ultimately, an important message of this research is that the impact of socioeconomic status on high-school completion – a primary mechanism for socioeconomic mobility across generations – must not be understated or overlooked by policymakers who aim to address social mobility across generations of immigrant groups in the USA.
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