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| Journal of Latinos and… | 7 |
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Showing all 7 results
Ocasio, Kelly M. – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2014
This article reviews recent literature on how Latinos progress through critical junctures of the teacher pipeline: high school graduation, college access and persistence, obtaining a teaching degree, and securing a job as a classroom teacher. This thorough investigation of the Latino experience through each of these junctures offers a better…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Academic Persistence, Access to Education, High School Graduates
Lopez, Cynthia Ortiz; Donovan, Loretta – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2009
Grounded in J. L. Epstein's (2001) types of involvement, this literature review investigates family-school partnerships that (a) empower Latino families in the area of mathematics education, (b) promote student achievement in mathematics, (c) impact parent-child involvement in mathematics at home, and (d) support Family Math Nights. Family Math…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematics Achievement, Parent Participation, Hispanic Americans
Aleman, Enrique, Jr. – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2009
Utilizing a critical race theory (CRT) framework, I conduct a rhetorical and discursive analysis of data from a study of Utah Latino/a educational and political leaders. In analyzing how participants advocate closing the achievement gaps that affect Latina/o and Chicana/o students, I find that participants' political discourse is shaped by…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Critical Theory, Race, Hispanic Americans
Hernandez, Donald J.; Denton, Nancy A.; Macartney, Suzanne E. – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2007
This article presents a demographic portrait of young Hispanic children compared to young non-Hispanic Whites. New results from Census 2000 describe family and economic circumstances of children aged 08, as well as pre-K/nursery school and kindergarten enrollment for the United States, and for the 9 states with the largest number of young Hispanic…
Descriptors: Whites, Nursery Schools, Hispanic Americans, Young Children
Peer reviewedTanno, Dolores Valencia – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2003
Research suggests that Latino students' success in college is closely linked to the interpersonal relationships they experience with faculty and staff. However, the convergence of technology, media, and education promises less rather than more of these types of interactions. Relevant research is reviewed on the growth of technology-based…
Descriptors: College Students, Educational Attitudes, Educational Research, Educationally Disadvantaged
Peer reviewedValencia, Richard R.; Black, Mary S. – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2002
Examines the myth that Mexican American children have poor academic achievement because their parents don't value education. Focuses on the myth's origins in "deficit thinking" and concepts of "cultural deprivation" and "at-risk." Examines evidence to the contrary: Mexican Americans' long struggle for equal educational opportunity, studies…
Descriptors: Educational Attitudes, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethnic Stereotypes, High Risk Students
Peer reviewedTrueba, Henry T. – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2002
Immigrants possess unique skills and flexibility to manage different identities that coexist in different contexts simultaneously. Latino immigrants were once considered handicapped by their experiences of oppression and low socioeconomic status, lacking cultural capital. As demographics change, ability to function in a diverse, multilingual…
Descriptors: Biculturalism, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethnicity, Hispanic American Students

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