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The Immigrant Advantage in Adolescent Educational Expectations
by
Lanuza, Yader R.
, Feliciano, Cynthia
in
Academic Aspiration
/ Adolescents
/ Advantages
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Cultural capital
/ Cultural factors
/ Educational research
/ Expectation
/ Expectations
/ Foreign languages
/ Graduate schools
/ Graduate studies
/ IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCES IN NORTH AMERICA AND AUSTRALIA: UNIONIZATION, DACA, WEIGHT, EDUCATIONAL EXPECTATIONS, AND MATERNAL DEPRESSION
/ Immigrants
/ Immigration policy
/ Language
/ Language usage
/ Migrant Children
/ Migrant Education
/ Minority students
/ Noncitizens
/ Parents & parenting
/ Regression analysis
/ Social privilege
/ Young Children
2016
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The Immigrant Advantage in Adolescent Educational Expectations
by
Lanuza, Yader R.
, Feliciano, Cynthia
in
Academic Aspiration
/ Adolescents
/ Advantages
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Cultural capital
/ Cultural factors
/ Educational research
/ Expectation
/ Expectations
/ Foreign languages
/ Graduate schools
/ Graduate studies
/ IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCES IN NORTH AMERICA AND AUSTRALIA: UNIONIZATION, DACA, WEIGHT, EDUCATIONAL EXPECTATIONS, AND MATERNAL DEPRESSION
/ Immigrants
/ Immigration policy
/ Language
/ Language usage
/ Migrant Children
/ Migrant Education
/ Minority students
/ Noncitizens
/ Parents & parenting
/ Regression analysis
/ Social privilege
/ Young Children
2016
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Do you wish to request the book?
The Immigrant Advantage in Adolescent Educational Expectations
by
Lanuza, Yader R.
, Feliciano, Cynthia
in
Academic Aspiration
/ Adolescents
/ Advantages
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Cultural capital
/ Cultural factors
/ Educational research
/ Expectation
/ Expectations
/ Foreign languages
/ Graduate schools
/ Graduate studies
/ IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCES IN NORTH AMERICA AND AUSTRALIA: UNIONIZATION, DACA, WEIGHT, EDUCATIONAL EXPECTATIONS, AND MATERNAL DEPRESSION
/ Immigrants
/ Immigration policy
/ Language
/ Language usage
/ Migrant Children
/ Migrant Education
/ Minority students
/ Noncitizens
/ Parents & parenting
/ Regression analysis
/ Social privilege
/ Young Children
2016
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The Immigrant Advantage in Adolescent Educational Expectations
Journal Article
The Immigrant Advantage in Adolescent Educational Expectations
2016
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Overview
Previous research has shown uniquely high expectations among children of immigrants. However, existing studies have not focused on why children of immigrants have an expectations advantage over their native-born counterparts or if this has changed over time. This study shows that an immigrant advantage in graduate school expectations persists among adolescent children of immigrants today. Regression analyses reveal that this advantage is largely explained by higher parental expectations, greater interest in school, and foreign language use in early childhood. We argue that these factors can be conceptualized as forms of cultural capital stemming from unique aspects of the immigrant experience that are common across immigrant families.
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