Negotiating Culture and Educational Expectations for Latin American Migrants: Addressing Challenges for Parents, Students, and Educators

Negotiating Culture and Educational Expectations for Latin American Migrants: Addressing Challenges for Parents, Students, and Educators

Copyright: © 2024 |Pages: 19
DOI: 10.4018/979-8-3693-1451-7.ch009
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Abstract

This chapter focuses on the many renegotiations required surrounding educational pursuits for Latin American migrant populations. Migrants negotiate important cultural values and experience cultural loss, confront several challenges of (im)migration, and may experience racialization via linguistic barriers and institutional expectations. Anthropological inquiry suggests that education, in terms of engagement and outcomes, is culturally defined, and thus, has implications for the social structure in multicultural America, including educational institutions. Drawing on social science scholarship and ethnographic research, this chapter concludes with theoretical and practical implications to consider how educators, parents, and students might partner together more productively, making space for dialogue about what education can and perhaps should provide. Ultimately, this exploration may help to mitigate the many challenges migrants face transitioning their expectations of education to improve the well-being of parents, students, and educators in the process.
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Culture, Education, And Challenges Of (Im)Migration

Culture informs the definition of education, including how and from whom it should be disseminated. From hunter gatherers, whose division of labor by gender enables experiential learning through observation and direct practice (Finkel, 2009; Lee 2003; Marshall, 1980), to industrialized societies with formal classrooms wherein the holder of the knowledge stands before a group of eager students, specific cultures have determined what is deemed important to learn, and from whom and how it should be taught. Education is a critical aspect of every culture as each generation must learn various, important skills, values, and lessons from community members. In this process, each person begins to learn and manifest their roles in society to create a collaborative network of interconnected, interdependent people.

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