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Transcript of Bienvenidos, Byenvini, Wilkommen: Welcoming Immigrant, Refugee, and Migrant Students Experiencing...
![Page 1: Bienvenidos, Byenvini, Wilkommen: Welcoming Immigrant, Refugee, and Migrant Students Experiencing Homelessness into Our Schools Christina Dukes, NCHE,](https://reader034.fdocuments.us/reader034/viewer/2022052701/56649e2d5503460f94b1c45c/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Bienvenidos, Byenvini,
Wilkommen:Welcoming Immigrant, Refugee, and Migrant Students Experiencing Homelessness into Our
Schools
Christina Dukes, NCHE, [email protected]
Margaret MacDonnell, BRYCS, [email protected]
Jan Moore, NCHE, [email protected]
Karen Morgan, CCPS, [email protected]
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Session Outline
Who are immigrants, refugees, and migrants and what are their life experiences?
How do we know if an immigrant/refugee/migrant student is McKinney-Vento eligible?
How can immigrant/refugee/migrant programs collaborate with homeless education programs to serve eligible children? How has your district collaborated?
Group activity and discussion
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Plyler v. Doe: A Reminder When Working with Immigrant, Refugee, and Migrant Students
Undocumented children and youth have the same right to attend public school as U.S. citizens and are covered by the McKinney-Vento Act to the same extent as other children and youth (Plyler v. Doe)
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Who are immigrants?
Lots of definitionsUS Dept of Education’s Emergency Immigrant Education
Program definition – “students not born in this country who have been enrolled in US schools for less than three years and who are between the ages of 3 and 19.”
Includes refugees and migrantsWide-ranging ethnic backgroundsKey reason for US population growthUrban vs rural population increasesMixed status families
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What are immigrants’ life experiences?
Unique stressorsInitial drop in status and earningsFewer options for housingFamily separationUncertainty and anxiety
Generational culture clashParents vs the American way of life
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Immigrants and schools
Most children of immigrants fare as well as or better than their native peers in schoolSubpopulations lag – especially Mexican and Central
AmericansLEP students - fastest growing population in public
schools5% of total school population is LEP; 40% of foreign born are
LEP350 language groups
Parental involvement affected by language/cultural barriersDifficulty learning to navigate educational system
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Refugee Definition
Refugee /Asylee Legal immigrant with special status Refugees have been interviewed/screened overseas by U.S.
Government and granted legal status before coming to the U.S. Fleeing persecution Migration unplanned; often have long, difficult journey, have lost
family members, endured physical/emotional trauma
Others eligible for refugee benefits: Asylees come to the U.S. undocumented or as immigrants and
apply for asylum once here. Once they receive asylum, they are eligible for the same benefits as refugees.
Cuban/Haitian entrants
Trafficking victims
U.S. resettled almost 60,000 refugees in FY08U.S. resettled almost 60,000 refugees in FY08Welcoming Immigrant, Refugee, and Migrant Students Experiencing Homelessness into Our Schools Slide 7
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A Refugee is a Person Who:
"owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country..." (United Nations, the Convention Related to the Status of Refugee, 1951)
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Served refugees and immigrants since early 1900s1 of 10 national voluntary agencies that resettle
refugeesResettle ~ 30% of all refugees through a network of
over 100 local Catholic CharitiesServe unaccompanied refugee children (URM
programs)Serve victims of international human traffickingServe undocumented children in federal custody
Provide Technical Assistance on migrating children and families
USCCB Migration & Refugee Services
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Our Changing Demographics...
Over 30 million immigrants and refugees live in the US today (highest number in US history).
More than one in four children in the U.S. today are immigrants or children of immigrants (up from 13% in 1990).
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Where They Come From
Established CommunitiesSoutheast Asia: Vietnamese, Laotians, Cambodians,
HmongEurope: Former Soviet, Bosnian, AlbanianAfrica: Somali, Ethiopian, SudaneseLatin America: Cuba and Colombia
New Arrivals:Africa: Somali Bantu, Liberians, BurundiAsia: BurmeseEurope: Meskhetian TurksMiddle East: Iraqis
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Life Experiences
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Experiences Overseas and Upon Arrival
Unaccompanied and “attached” minors – fragile families
Child reunification with parents or other relatives
Lack of formal schooling, interrupted schooling (camp vs. urban setting)
Families arrive “with only the shirts on their backs” and assistance through the resettlement agency
Recent arrivals have lower education, less English/ literacy, agrarian background, few urban work skills, years in refugee camps – so steady employment may be difficult initially
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Experiences Overseas and Upon Arrival
May initially live together with other family members
May move several times before they find permanent housing
Some families may become disconnected from resettlement agencies and other social supports
School as bridge promoting cultural integration for the whole family
May be very committed to education, though cultural practices and expectations disguise this
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Strengths
“Children of immigrants typically are imbued with a strong sense of family obligation and ethnic pride, and with the importance of education. As a result, the children of immigrants tend to have higher educational aspirations and are less likely than children of U.S.-born families to engage in risky behaviors...”
Shield & Behrman, Future of Children, 2004, p. 6
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Cultural Differences in Expectations of Schooling
Education as school vs. education as upbringingTalking with teachers, involvement with schoolRole reversal – “culture broker” roleBehaviors viewed as positive in U.S. may be seen
as negative by other culturesDiscipline
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What makes a student a “migrant”?
The child himself/herself or the child’s parent or spouse is a migratory agricultural worker, migratory dairy worker, or migratory fisher
The child has made a move within the last 36 months to seek temporary or seasonal employment in agricultural or fishing work
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What makes a student a “migrant”? (cont)
The move in search of employmentwas from one school district to anotherin a state comprised of a single school district, was
from one administrative district to anotherin a school district of more than 15,000 square miles,
was 20 miles or more to a temporary residence to engage in a fishing activity
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What is the migrant lifestyle like?
The migrant lifestyle is tentative by nature; it depends on many things that are out of the family’s control
The migrant lifestyle is highly mobile
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What is the migrant lifestyle like? (cont)
The majority of migrant families live in povertyIn migrant families, individual needs and desires
often become secondary to the survival of the family
Children may be asked to work to help provide for the family
An excellent resource on the migrant lifestye: The Culture of Migrancy by Bridget McGilvra at www.serve.org/nche/ibt/sc_migrant.php
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How does education fit into the migrant lifestyle?
In some of the families’ native countries, education is not mandatory; the U.S. education system may be very different for them
Migrant parents value education as a ticket to their children’s futures
However…
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How does education fit into the migrant lifestyle? (cont)
Education can be viewed as a “luxury” and is secondary to survival
Poor nutrition and lack of medical care associated with the migrant lifestyle mean that migrant children often arrive to school too sick or too tired to learn
Migrant parents often have low levels of education and may be intimidated; educators are viewed as “the experts”
View of “my job is to provide; the school’s job is to educate”
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Typical Migrancy Streams
Source: www.palmbeachpost.com
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Migrant Living Arrangements
Many live in employer-owned migrant campsMany migrant camps avoid being subject to
housing codes and standardsMigrant families are often at the mercy of their
employer in terms of the cost of their housing and other issues, as well
Many migrant living arrangements would be considered substandard
Families that do not live in migrant camps are left to find housing on meager incomes
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Migrant Living Arrangements
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Migrant Living Arrangements (cont)
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Migrant Living Arrangements (cont)
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Migrant Living Arrangements (cont)
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Similarities Between Migrant and Homeless Families
What similarities do you see between the migrant lifestyle and the homeless lifestyle?
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The McKinney-Vento Definition of Homeless
Children and youth who lack a fixed, regular and adequate nighttime residence are considered homeless. This includes children and youth who are:Living in emergency or transitional housing;
Sharing housing due to loss of housing, economic hardship, or other similar reason;
Living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or camping grounds due to lack of alternative adequate housing;
Awaiting foster care placement;
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The McKinney-Vento Definition of Homeless (cont)
Living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned buildings, substandard housing, or bus or train stations;
Abandoned in hospitals;Children and youth who have a primary nighttime
residence that is a public or private place not designed for, or ordinarily used as, regular sleeping accommodations; or
Migratory children who qualify as homeless because they are living in the circumstances described above.
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Determining Eligibility of Immigrant, Refugee and Migrant Students
Immigrant, refugee, and migrant students are not automatically considered homeless
Immigrant, refugee, and migrant students are considered homeless inasmuch as their living arrangements meet the McKinney-Vento definition of homeless
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Determining Eligibility: “The Nature of the Beast”
Determining eligibility is a case-by-case determination made by examining the living arrangement of each individual student
Some instances will be clear-cut; others will require further investigation and then a judgment call
Determinations of eligibility must be made expeditiously so that immediate enrollment and the prompt provision of services can occur.
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Is This Student Homeless?
Steps to determining eligibility:Get the facts about the student’s living arrangementDoes the student’s living arrangement fit into one of
the examples of homelessness listed in the law?If not, does the student live in another type of living
arrangement that does not meet the law’s fixed, regular, and adequate standard?
Check out the Determining Eligibility brief handout
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Student Rights Under McKinney-Vento
Immediate enrollment, even if lacking paperworkSchool selection: Right to attend the school of origin (if
feasible) or local schoolTransportation to/from school of origin, if requested by
the parent (or, for unaccompanied youth, by liaison)Comparable servicesPublic posting of rightsFree school meals (under the Child Nutrition…Act)Title I, Part A support (under Title I, Part A of NCLB)Special education, where necessary (under IDEA)
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Educational Barriers
Deficits in previous educationStress-related emotional problemsPerceived lack of parental support for educationLanguage barriersDifferent culture/ learning stylesLack of parental materials in native languageDiscrimination/rejection due to cultural
misunderstandings
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Community Collaboration
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Collaborating to Serve Immigrant Students Experiencing Homelessness
Schools must recognize the importance of informal networks in the help-seeking behavior of immigrants and incorporate these into their existing collaboratives
Title III / LEP programsTranslation servicesMedical organizationsFaith-based organizationsNewcomer programsSchool-based community centers
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U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program
30-90 days of “core services”- local Voluntary Agencies (e.g. USCCB/Catholic Charities, USCRI, LIRS, World Relief, etc.) Locate and rent safe and sanitary housing, nr transportation,
sufficient space, basic furnishings for all family members Airport reception, initial food, medical screenings School registration for children, immunizations Basic cultural orientation Cash assistance, medical assistance
Cash assistance and housing – 4-8 monthsSocial services (adults) – up to 5 years
Employment ESL
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Promising Practices
To learn about the local service system:Contact state refugee coordinator & community
organizations who work with refugeesAttend state/community refugee task force/coalitions,
educate them about McKinney-VentoGet contact information for at least 1 person from each
agency
Work with Resettlement agencies/ECBO’s to:Provide interpretation/translation and cultural consultationsMeet basic needs, provide family supportBring in community leaders to talk to older students about
the importance of education and careersReach out to parents, orient them to schools
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Promising Practices (cont)
Contact BRYCS (www.brycs.org): BRYCS staff can assist with research on
cultures/backgrounds/ promising practicesBRYCS staff can also provide case consultations,
guidance on working with families, and information on other resources for children, such as the Unaccompanied Refugee Minor Program.
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Work with schools (e.g. ESL teachers) and community agencies to:Develop refugee community liaisonsEstablish a relationship with families before discussing weighty
academic or behavioral issuesHold meetings and events at varied timesCreate afterschool clubs to bring students of similar ethnicities
together for mutual & positive supportCreate homework clubs, recruit volunteer tutorsProvide school-wide, regular recognition of diversityCreate individualized learning plans WITH studentsMulti-sensory classroom activitiesPeer mentoring (same ethnicity or U.S.-born)
Promising Practices, cont.
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Collaboration with Resettlement Agencies and Ethnic Community Based Organizations
(ECBOs)
Resettlement/ECBO or other Immigrant-Serving Organization
Interpretation/ Translation
Cultural Consultations/ Training
Immigration Services
Community RefugeeTask Force
Linking Parents with Schools
Cultural Liaisons/ Community Leaders
Social Services for Basic Needs
Morland/BRYCS (2006)
ESL/Family Literacy
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Collaborating to Serve Migrant Students Experiencing Homelessness
Learn who the Director of your school district’s Migrant Program is and communicate frequently
Get to know the Migrant staff (home-school liaisons, migrant recruiters, etc.)
Attend the monthly Migrant support staff meetings Present information on the Homeless Education
Program to the Migrant staff Be available for questions via phone and e-mailMake home visits with migrant staff, as needed
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Collaborating to Serve Migrant Students Experiencing Homelessness (cont)
Be familiar with the data tracking system for both programs
Have MIS develop a program to identify the students who qualify for both programs
Collaborate with Food Services to identify joint students
Attend Migrant Matrix and other information fairs to learn and share
Attend Interagency meetings together Pool resources to serve studentsWelcoming Immigrant, Refugee, and Migrant Students Experiencing Homelessness into Our Schools Slide 48
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Collaborating to Serve Migrant Students Experiencing Homelessness (cont)
Additional ideasPresent at Migrant Parent meetings Attend local Hispanic/Latino Coalition meetings Homeless Education program reviews the Migrant
Certificates of Enrollments for possible identification Identify a school based person to work with both
programs
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Benefits of Migrant/Homeless Collaboration
Benefits offered to migrant students from the homeless education programImmediate enrollment without documentation
normally required for enrollment Right to stay in school of origin Ability to purchase school uniforms and shoes Direct certification for meals Transportation of Head Start students
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Benefits of Migrant/Homeless Collaboration
Benefits offered to homeless students from the migrant education programCoordination of after-school activities and summer
programs to access transportation Ability to transport families for services More staff
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Collaboration in Your District
Are there others ways you collaborate to serve homeless immigrant, refugee, and migrant students in your district?
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Scenarios
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OMAR
1. Does Omar qualify for services under McKinney-Vento? 2. How can you learn more about Omar’s background, culture, and language
in order to make more informed decisions about serving him? 3. Who can help with his family problems? 4. What, if anything, would you do about the guardianship issue? 5. Would you encourage more family involvement in his education? If so, what
strategies would you use?6. What other school or community resources might be helpful to Omar and his
family?
Omar is a 17 year old Somali Bantu refugee who has just arrived in the United States from a refugee camp in Kenya. He is living with his aunt’s family. They do not have legal guardianship and there seems to be family conflict at home - especially pressure to earn money for the family. He appears to have had minimal formal education and speaks little English - yet he is supposed to graduate from high school next year!
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LUISA
Luisa and her family were living in a grower-owned trailer in the grower’s migrant labor camp. Production has been low and so Luisa’s parents haven’t been making much money lately. They can no longer pay the rent that the grower is charging, so they’re evicted. They move in with Luisa’s aunt, who lives in a mobile home park by the train tracks a couple of miles down the road.
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LUISA (cont)
Is Luisa’s family homeless, according to McKinney-Vento? Why or why not?
If Luisa’s family was never evicted and still lived in the trailer…Would you consider Luisa’s family homeless? Why
or why not?What questions would you ask to determine if the
living arrangement would meet the McKinney-Vento definitionof homeless?
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LUISA (cont)
Production picks back up and Luisa’s family and her aunt’s family decide to pool their money to move out of Luisa’s aunt’s mobile home and rent a bigger place close by once Luisa’s aunt’s lease is up. Both families are in agreement with this and think it will be a good long-term arrangement. Are these families homeless? Why or why not?
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MAY
1. Does May qualify for services under McKinney-Vento? 2. What issues can you identify that she may need help with and to
which school department or outside agency would you refer her?3. What strengths does she bring to this situation and how can she
be empowered to capitalize on those strengths?4. How would you handle the situation with the family?5. What else would you recommend for May and her family?
May, a 13 year old Hmong refugee, was “adopted” by a large family while in the refugee camp in Thailand. She arrived in the United States just under a year ago, is learning English, and seems very motivated to do well. Recently, she suddenly began to skip school on a regular basis. Her ESL teacher found out she is “couch surfing” at the home of friends due to conflict with her family.
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JEAN
Jean, a 16-year-old, comes to your school in March to enroll. He said he left home because he can’t get along with his stepfather and is now staying with his girlfriend’s family. His mom wants him to come home, says he as a perfectly good home to come to and does not want him to enroll in another school. In addition, it is so late in the school year, that he is unlikely to complete the coursework needed to attain full credit for some of his courses.
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JEAN (cont)
Is Jean homeless according to McKinney-Vento? Why or why not?
How will you handle Jean’s mom’s objections to enrolling him in a different school?
If Jean drops out, saying that he needs to work to support himself, are there things you can do to encourage him to stay in school? What if he refuses?
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