(Press-News.org) Minority principals and other administrative personnel at elementary and high schools play a key role in implementing policies and practices aimed at engaging immigrant parents of students, according to new research from Rice University, the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and Vanderbilt University.
The researchers examined how schools in districts with immigrant populations are addressing low levels of parent involvement in their children's education and providing opportunities for engagement and support. The study, which will be published in the March edition of Social Science Quarterly, compared 447 schools in districts that have established immigrant populations with 685 schools in areas that have rapidly expanding immigrant populations. The analysis was based on data from the 2003-04 National Center for Educational Statistics' Schools and Staffing Surveys.
"A substantial body of research has linked parent involvement to an increasingly wide range of schooling outcomes, including improved student performance and self-esteem, teacher confidence and community relations," said Melissa Marschall, associate professor of political science at Rice University and lead author of the study. "But in many cases, immigrant parents have cultural and language differences that negatively impact their involvement in their child's schooling and education. With the rapid growth of immigrant populations -- from 6 to 20 percent between 1970 and 2000, and estimates suggesting another 30 percent increase by 2015 -- parental outreach programs are more important than ever."
The study found that "cultural brokers" -- school personnel with important connections to parents' racial or ethnic origin group -- had a positive impact in school policies and practices in districts with established immigrant populations (Houston, Chicago, New York City and towns near the U.S.-Mexico border). However, at schools in new immigrant destinations, like Cedar Falls, Iowa, or Durham, N.C., such cultural brokers are in much shorter supply. At these schools, though, the study found a positive association between minority principals (African-American) and parental involvement programs, which suggests that these principals are taking an active role in addressing the needs of immigrant and minority parents.
"We believe this research demonstrates that school personnel don't necessarily have to share the same backgrounds to understand the needs and issues of immigrant parents and students or to make decisions that will benefit them," Marschall said.
Marschall said she hopes the study will encourage schools and districts to explore ways to engage immigrant populations and provide resources that these groups need to be involved.
"Schools have always counted on parental support, even for tasks as simple as encouraging their children to do homework," she said. "A lot of schools have targets for minority outreach, but the only way to effectively reach this group is to provide the resources and information that they need. To do this, schools must understand the population they serve. As school demographics change, school outreach programs must evolve," she said.
###The study was co-authored by Paru Shah of the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and Katharine Donato of Vanderbilt University and was funded by the Russell Sage Foundation and the National Science Foundation.
Related links:
Melissa Marschall bio:
http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~marschal/Home.html
http://www.russellsage.org/visiting-scholars/melissa-j-marschall
Study: Parent Involvement Policy in Established and New Immigrant Destinations: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1540-6237.2011.00833.x/pdf
Russell Sage Foundation: http://www.russellsage.org
National Science Foundation: http://www.nsf.gov
Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation's top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of Architecture, Business, Continuing Studies, Engineering, Humanities, Music, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and is known for its "unconventional wisdom." With 3,708 undergraduates and 2,374 graduate students, Rice's undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice has been ranked No. 1 for best quality of life multiple times by the Princeton Review and No. 4 for "best value" among private universities by Kiplinger's Personal Finance. To read "What they're saying about Rice," go to www.rice.edu/nationalmedia/Rice.pdf.
Minority administrators, school personnel key to engaging immigrant parents
2012-03-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Experiment observes elusive neutrino transformation
2012-03-12
PASADENA, Calif.—An international team of physicists—including several from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech)—has detected and measured, for the first time, a transformation of one particular type of neutrino into another type. The finding, physicists say, may help solve some of the biggest mysteries about the universe, such as why the universe contains more matter than antimatter—a phenomenon that explains why stars, planets, and people exist at all.
The results, released online on March 8, come from the Daya Bay Reactor Neutrino Experiment, which consists ...
Fantazzle Fantasy Sports Games Announce their 2012 Free March Madness College Basketball Bracket & March Madness Salary Cap Games
2012-03-12
Fantazzle Fantasy Sports Games is awarding its community with two different Free March Madness Bracket Games that will be offering several hundred dollars in prizes. The first contest, available for entry now, will be offering $250 in prizes and is the traditional tournament-long bracket. The second bracket will be available for entry shortly after the first bracket game starts and will include the final 32 teams.
"We ran a free bracket game last year that was sponsored by Steiner Sports and it was such a success that we decided to run another game this year. Then, ...
Insect DNA offers tiny clues about animals' changing habitats
2012-03-12
The long-term impact of climate change on natural communities of wild animals could be better understood thanks to a new study.
The research will help predict how migration of animals or changes to their habitats associated with climate change could impact on the evolution of relationships between predators and their prey.
Scientists have shed light on how species and their natural enemies chase each other across continents in a game of cat and mouse lasting for millions of years. They used a technique known as population genetics to reveal historical information hidden ...
Clock gene helps plants prepare for spring flowering, study shows
2012-03-12
Scientists have made fresh discoveries about the processes that govern plants' internal body clocks and help them adjust to changing seasons, triggering the arrival of flowers in spring.
Researchers tested computer models of gene networks in a simple cress plant to determine the role played by a protein, known as TOC1, in governing these daily cycles. The model shows how 12 genes work together to run the plant's complex clockwork, and reset the clock at dawn and dusk each day.
Researchers found that the TOC1 protein, which was previously associated with helping plants ...
Smithsonian scientists discover that multiple species of seacows once coexisted
2012-03-12
Sirenians, or seacows, are a group of marine mammals that include manatees and dugongs; today, only one species of seacow is found in each world region. Smithsonian scientists have discovered that this was not always the case. According to the fossil record of these marine mammals, which dates back 50 million years ago, it was more common to find three, or possibly more, different species of seacows living together at one time. This suggests that the environment and food sources for ancient seacows were also different than today. The team's findings are published in the ...
Avis Israel Offers Unique "On Demand" Car Rental Program for Evenings and Weekends
2012-03-12
Based on successful consumer research conducted through Facebook advertising, Avis Israel has launched its new "On Demand" car rental program. On Demand offers flexible and convenient access to short-term car rentals, without having to register or schedule ahead of time.
Focused on younger, urban drivers who would usually use public transportation or borrow a parents' vehicle, the On Demand program provides an attractive option. Drivers can now rent a car for short periods, ranging in time from only one hour up through a long weekend of Thursday afternoon ...
Radiation oncologists are discussing infertility risks with young cancer patients
2012-03-12
More than 80 percent of radiation oncologists discuss the impact of cancer treatments on fertility with their patients of childbearing age, which can lead to improved quality of life for young cancer patients who are living much longer after their original diagnosis thanks to modern treatment options, according to a study in Practical Radiation Oncology (PRO), the official clinical practice journal of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO).
In the past, the clinical focus for young cancer patients was strictly survival. With the success of today's treatment ...
New pig model may lead to progress in treating debilitating eye disease
2012-03-12
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – A newly developed, genetically modified pig may hold the keys to the development of improved treatments and possibly even a cure for retinitis pigmentosa (RP), the most common inherited retinal disease in the United States. The pig model was developed by researchers in the University of Louisville Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences and at the National Swine Resource and Research Center at the University of Missouri.
"We have previously relied mostly on rodent models to study the development and progression of this disease, and although very ...
Teach your robot well (Georgia Tech shows how)
2012-03-12
Within a decade, personal robots could become as common in U.S. homes as any other major appliance, and many if not most of these machines will be able to perform innumerable tasks not explicitly imagined by their manufacturers. This opens up a wider world of personal robotics, in which machines are doing anything their owners can program them to do—without actually being programmers.
Laying some helpful groundwork for this world is, a new study by researchers in Georgia Tech's Center for Robotics & Intelligent Machines (RIM), who have identified the types of questions ...
'Chum cam' underwater video survey shows that reef sharks thrive in marine reserves
2012-03-12
STONY BROOK, NY -- A team of scientists, led by the Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony Brook University, used video cameras to count Caribbean reef sharks (Carcharhinus perezi) inside and outside marine reserves on the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef in the Caribbean Sea. Using survey data collected from 200 baited remote underwater video (BRUV) cameras, nicknamed "chum cams," the scientists compared the relative abundance of these reef sharks in two marine reserves with those in two areas where fishing is allowed, and demonstrated that the sharks were more abundant ...