Moving beyond the Single Story: Engaging a Comprehensive Strategy in Our Work with Undocumented Immigrant Youth Roberto G. Gonzales, University of Chicago.
Post on 14-Jan-2016
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moving beyond the Single Story: Engaging a Comprehensive Strategy in Our Work with Undocumented Immigrant Youth
Roberto G. Gonzales, University of Chicago
The Danger of the Single Story
When we show people as one thing over and over and over again that is what they become
To insist on the single story of someone is to flatten their experiences and overlook the many other stories that formed them
What is their single story?
What about here?
Success Narratives
The Dilemma of Urgency
11.1 million people living in unauthorized status (Pew 2010)
Those who migrate as children number 2.1 million (MPI 2010)
Unauthorized Settlement: a new era of immigration
Plyler’s Dilemma
TODAY
Tens of thousands leave high schools every year encountering uncertain futures
Plyler V. Doe (1982) provides K-12 Access
Did not address education beyond high school
Laws allow them to go to school, but they cannot work, vote, travel outside of the country, receive financial aid for college, and drive in most states
Lack of Continuity
K-12 EXPERIENCES LATE ADOLESCENCE
From Childhood to Adulthood
Academic Research
Educational Struggles and Attainment
Risks and Resiliency
Importance of Mentors and Social Networks
The Transition to Adulthood
As undocumented children make transitions into late adolescence, they move from spaces of belonging to rejection, from inclusion to exclusion, from de facto legal, to “illegal”
The Early Transition
WAKING UP TO A NIGHTMARE
Well you know what, I never actually felt like I wasn’t born here. ‘Cause when I came here, I was like ten and a half. I went to school, I learned the language. But I first felt like I was really out of place when I graduated from high school, when I tried to get a job.
Because I didn’t have a Social Security number….Well I didn’t even know. I mean, I didn’t even know what it meant. You know Social Security, legal, illegal. I didn’t even know what that was. I asked my mom and [she] said, “it’s in the process.” In the process? I didn’t even know what that meant. I don’t know why she would tell us that. –Rodolfo
BLOCKED PATHS-UNCERTAIN FUTURES
But when I actually wanted to get a job, I couldn’t because I didn’t have a Social Security number. So, my first job was cleaning carpets, helping my dad. –Rodolfo
That really sucked. I had been all like I’m going to get my car before all of you, but I couldn’t. It was unfair and I had to, you know. What could I do? How could I tell them I can’t, I can’t drive? I can’t get my license. It really messed me up. –Sergio
STIGMA AND CHANGED SOCIAL PATTERNS
I just stopped going out. I was tired of asking for a ride and coming up with excuses and every time it was a hassle with my friends. They wouldn’t let it go. They wouldn’t let it go. So I started telling them I was too busy with school. At first they didn’t like that, but after a while they stopped inviting me. I end up spending a lot of weekends by myself because most of my friends don’t call me anymore. It’s such a hassle to explain everything to people. And it has affected the way I am when I meet new people. I used to be very outgoing, but I try to keep my guard up, try not to get too close to people. –Grace
The Transition to Adulthood
K-12 education is free and legal
Most institutions in childhood do not require legal status
Late adolescence triggers legal limitations:WorkingDriving Financial AidNightlife
Succession of blocked opportunities
Fear, stigma, changed social patterns
Forced decisions—reveal or conceal
Physical/ emotional manifestations
Protected Status
Transition to Adulthood
Awake to a Nightmare
College-goersEarly-exiters
Post-High School Experiences
DIVERGING TRAJECTORIES
Transition to Adulthood
MECHANISMS-Supportive learning environments-Trusting relationships with adults-Peer networks-Access to resources
MECHANISMS-Negative school experiences-Resource-poor families-Falling through the cracks-Exiting school early-Entering “illegal” adult world
OUTCOMES-Form positive networks-Develop resiliency-Preserve the “buffer”
OUTCOMES-Little trust in adults and institutions-Left to fend for themselves-Daily contact with legal limitations -Forced underground
Completing the Transition to Adulthood
A MASTER STATUS
The people working at those places, like the cooks and the cashiers, they are really young, and I feel really old. Like what am I doing there if they are all like 16, 17 years old. The others are like señoras who are 35. They dropped out of school, but because they have little kids they are still working at the restaurant. Thinking about that, it makes me feel so stupid. And the factories, too. They ask me,“Que estas haciendo aqui? You can speak English. You graduated from high school. You can work anywhere. –Esperanza
CONCLUSIONS
Interaction between contexts – legal, cultural and developmental – creates a dramatic shift in experiences
Stigma creates a second border that reinforces legal exclusions
The experience of “illegality” – living in a narrowly constricted world in the shadows – is a relearning process
Key supports within the community and school can mediate the effects of undocumented status
While a great deal of divergence happens at earlier transitions, over time trajectories converge
CONCLUSIONS
Delayed or blocked mobility caused by a lack of legal status is leveling educational motivations, stressing parent-child relationships, contradicting notions of small-c citizenship and creating the conditions for a new underclass.
These processes are also rendering our measures of intergenerational mobility by educational progress irrelevant by breaking the assumed link between educational attainment and material/psychological outcomes after school
Implications for Policy
Today’s children are growing up under arguably harsher contexts – more than 1 million are children – while those now adults are in jeopardy of “aging out” of eligibility
Moving the legalization discussion beyond one-size-fits-all solutions, and taking into consideration the complex and varied realities of today’s immigrants
Legalization efforts aimed at regularizing undocumented youth have much in common with school reform work
Implications for Community
School offers one of the few legally permissible pathways Schools – the majority does not go on to post-secondary
education Community – very few other options outside of school Most jobs are off limits
The transition to illegality has important health implications Clinical – little understanding of the effects of the
developmental/legal processes for this unique population
THANK YOU
rggonzales@uchicago.edu
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