promoting the success of immigrant students and families

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Promoting the Success of Immigrant Students and Families

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Promoting the Success of Immigrant Students and Families. Critical Question What do we need to know to promote the success of immigrant students?. Goals. Strengthen cultural awareness and competence Deepen understanding of the challenges immigrant families face - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Promoting the Success

of Immigrant Students

andFamilies

Page 2: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families
Page 3: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Critical Question

What do we need to know to promote the success of immigrant students?

Page 4: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Goals

• Strengthen cultural awareness and competence

• Deepen understanding of the challenges immigrant families face

• Provide classroom and school-wide strategies for working with immigrant students and parents.

Page 5: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Use the polling buttons to indicate yes (check) or no (X) Were you born outside of Alberta?

WHO WE ARE

Page 7: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Were one or more of your parents born outside of Canada?

Page 9: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Have you traveled outside of Canada?

Page 11: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Permanent Residents Admitted in 2011Rank Country of origin Number Percentage

1 Philippines 34,991 14.1%2 People’s Republic of China 28,696 11.5%3 India 24,965 10.0%4 United States of America 8,829 3.5%5 Iran 6,840 2.7%6 United Kingdom and Colonies 6,550 2.6%7 Haiti 6,208 2.5%8 Pakistan 6,073 2.4%9 France 5,867 2.4%10 United Arab Emirates 5,223 2.1%

Total Top 10 134,242 54.0%All Other Source Countries 114,506 46.0%TOTAL 248,748 100%

Source: Citizenship and Immigration Canada, Facts and Figures 2011.

Page 12: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Permanent Resident Immigrants 2012

Family class 64,901 25%Economic Immigrants—Principal Applicants

68,208 62%

Economic Immigrants—Spouses and Dependants

92,409

Refugees 23,056 9%Other Immigrants 8,936 3%Total 257,515 100%

Source: Citizenship and Immigration Canada, RDM, Preliminary 2012 Data.

Page 13: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Permanent Immigrant by Class

Source: Citizenship and Immigration Canada

Page 14: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

37,068 57,561 65,618 57,681 58,228

Source: Citizenship and Immigration Canada.

Temporary Foreign Workers in Alberta

Page 15: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

  2003 2005 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

Calgary 9,271 11,186 11,246 13,039 13,708 16,107 15,060

Edmonton 4,810 6,016 6,540 7,517 8,508 11,008 10,457

Medicine Hat 149 149 163 181 169 207 189

Lethbridge 169 228 279 298 483 556 509

Red Deer 203 322 567 676 537 586 759

Other Alberta 1,237 1,503 2,065 2,490 3,612 4,186 3,989

Alberta 15,839 19,404 20,860 24,201 27,017 32,650 30,963

Source: Citizenship and Immigration Canada.

Permanent Resident Immigrants

Page 16: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Positive Minus Interesting

WHAT WAS POSITIVE, MINUS OR INTERESTING?

Page 18: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

• Language and Culture

• Climate

• Lack of social support

• Employment barriers

• Debt burden

• Discrimination

• Benefit waiting period

• Housing

• Psychological trauma experienced as a result of fleeing a conflict zone

New Immigrant Challenges

Page 19: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Language and Culture

Different foods, housing, clothing

Different way of life

Different rules and expectations

Culture shock

New Immigrant Challenges

Page 20: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

What do you see ?

Page 21: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Employment barriers

No recognition of credentials

No Canadian experience, poor job network

Many live in poverty, in spite of holding two jobs

New Immigrant Challenges

Page 22: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Debt burden

Refugees have to repay government loans for medical exams and travel expenses

New Immigrant Challenges

Page 23: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Discrimination• There are stories of exclusionary and discriminatory practices in

the workplace and community such as:

Denied jobs for lacking Canadian work experience

Devaluation of foreign credentials

Denied rental accommodations, etc.

New Immigrant Challenges

Page 24: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Benefit waiting period

90 day wait for health care

Temporary Foreign Workers do not qualify

New Immigrant Challenges

Page 25: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Housing• Primary concern for new immigrants• May be unaware of their rights as renters• Landlords may require letters confirming employment

which may not be possible

New Immigrant Challenges

Page 26: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

• Will have a major impact on both the student and his/her family and may impede a smooth transition into their new life

• Will impact all aspects of student’s well being including: academics, socialization, emotional health, etc

For support, CONTACT:• School guidance counsellor• District psychologist • Local Immigrant Services Agency

Psychological Trauma experienced as a result of fleeing a conflict zone

Page 27: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

WHAT DID YOU FIND SURPRISING OR INTERESTING FROM THE INFORMATION THAT WAS JUST SHARED?

Page 29: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

http://www.settlement.org

New Moves: An Orientation Video for Newcomer Students

Page 30: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

What are we already doing well to support immigrant students?

Page 31: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

The total range of activities and ideas of a group of people with shared traditions, which are transmitted and reinforced by members of the group.

The attitudes, feelings, values, and behaviours that characterize and inform society as a whole or any social group within it.

Define culture

Page 32: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

• Surface Culture• LANGUAGE

• ARTS, LITERATURE • RELIGIONS, MUSIC, DRESS

• DANCE, GAMES, SPORTS, COOKING

• Folk Culture //////// awareness level boundary/////\\\

• NOTIONS OF MODESTY CONCEPTS OF BEAUTY• EDUCATION CHILD RAISING RULES OF DESCENT

• COSMOLOGY RELATIONSHIP TO THINGS, ANIMALS & PLANTS • COURTSHIP PRACTICES CONCEPT OF JUSTICE MOTIVATION TO WORK

• CRITERIA FOR LEADERSHIP DECISION MAKING PROCESSES DEITIES DEATH • IDEAS OF CLEANLINESS LOCUS OF CONTROL THEORY OF DISEASE PHYSICAL SPACE

• DEFINITION OF SANITY, FRIENDSHIP, LOVE, MURDER, LIFE, GENDER, FACIAL EXPRESSIONS • ROLES IN RELATION TO STATUS BY AGE, GENDER, CLASS, KINSHIP, OCCUPATION, RELIGION,

• CONVERSATIONAL PATTERNS IN VARIOUS SOCIAL CONTEXTS, CONCEPTION OF TIME & SPACE • PREFERENCES FOR COMPETITION, COOPERATION, INDIVIDUALISM OR GROUP NORMS, SIN, GRACE • NOTION OF ADULTHOOD, NOTION OF LOGIC AND VALIDITY, PHYSICAL SPACE ARRANGEMENTS, LIFE

Beyond the Tip of the Iceberg (Gary Weaver)

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• Tap into prior knowledge

• Model what students are to do

• Give students time to process new ideas

• Pre-teach vocabulary

• Use visual aids

• Attend to your language

• Build and nurture learning community

Constructivist Scaffolding Strategies

Page 35: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Tap into prior knowledge

Relate topic to their own lives and experiences

Make connection to student background

Ask students to share their experiences (give hints and suggestions, if needed)

Scaffolding

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Model what students are to doGive an example of how final product should look

Provide criteria for evaluation

Demonstrate the process through think-aloud

Make goals explicit

Scaffolding

Page 37: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Give students time to process new ideas

Provide structured talking time

Students verbally make sense of the ideas and articulate that sense with their buddies

Scaffolding

Page 38: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Pre-teach vocabulary Introduce words in context Have students develop illustrationsUse dictionary definitions last

Scaffolding

Page 39: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

• Inside Story Flash Cardsprintable vocabulary flashcards with striking images and unforgettable definitions http://insidestoryflashcards.com/

Tech tricks!

Page 40: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families
Page 41: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

• an online encyclopedia for "people with different needs, such as students, children, adults with learning difficulties and people who are trying to learn English"

• articles are usually shorter and present only basic information

Simple English Wikipedia

Page 42: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families
Page 43: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Use visual aids

Demonstrations, graphic organizers, photos, charts, films, manipulatives, timelines

Skim the chapter looking at photos and discussing, take a “picture walk” through the materials before reading the text

Scaffolding

Page 44: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Attend to your language

Not too fast, not too slow

Use body language

Be careful using humour, idioms, figures of speech

Use translation when necessary

Check if you are understood, paraphrase

Scaffolding

Page 45: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Build and nurture learning community

Work in groups whenever appropriate.

Scaffolding

Page 46: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

What other scaffolding strategies have you used?

Page 47: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

“Before teachers and administrators put expectations on parents regarding their involvement in the child’s education, they need to understand parents’ cultural backgrounds as it relates to education.

For example, it is unlikely that South Sudanese parents will expect to be involved as partners in the education of their child since in South Sudan, the responsibility for children’s education rests solely with the teacher.”

Working with South Sudanese Immigrant Students – Teachers Resources. Canadian Multicultural Education Foundation

How do we promote parental involvement in our schools?

Page 48: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

Parents sometimes work two or three jobs to make ends meet when they immigrate to Canada.

When immigrants first arrive in Canada, like their children, they too are enrolled in school taking English lessons provided by the Canadian government.

Increase Awareness of Immigrant Challenges

Page 49: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

• Find out about the family and be sensitive to their cultural practices.

• Reach out to families and invite parents to become involved. Initially, whenever possible, this should be done with the support of intercultural consultants and other community leaders.

(page 9 Teaching Somali Immigrant Children: Resources for Student Success. Canadian Multicultural Education Foundation and the Alberta Teachers Association)

Where To Begin? Connecting your School with the Immigrant Family

Page 50: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

• Meetings for high school completion requirements• Student award nights, art exhibits, math & science fairs• Vision screening and dental checks• Car seat safety checks• Clothing exchanges• Heritage language clubs taught by volunteers• Haircuts and Styling• Help with reading bills, mail, junk mail, etc.

Teaching Somali Immigrant Children: Resources for Student Success. Canadian Multicultural Education Foundation and the Alberta Teachers Association

Reaching the Community through Programs, Meetings and Events

Page 51: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

http://bit.ly/1cDwgjX

Working with Parents for Student Success For Our Kids

Settlement.org

Page 52: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

WORKING WITH SOUTH SUDANESE AND SOMALI STUDENTS RESOURCES FROM ATA

Page 53: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

School/Home Communication Handbook for Parents

Page 54: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

ATA PublicationLearning Together— Public Education in

Alberta

Page 55: Promoting the Success  of  Immigrant Students  and Families

STRATEGIES I WOULD LIKE TO TRY WITH MY IMMIGRANT STUDENTS AND FAMILIES