The Threat of Downward Assimilation Among Young African Immigrants in U.S. Schools

Author:

Harushimana Immaculee1,Awokoya Janet2

Affiliation:

1. Lehman College (CUNY), USA

2. California Lutheran University, USA

Abstract

This chapter presents research implications geared toward preventing the downward assimilation trend prevailing among young African immigrants in US public schools. Secondary data from three qualitative studies of integration and adaptation processes of African-born immigrant youth in urban school settings helped identify signs of downward assimilation, especially among males. Salient signs of this trend include low academic achievement, gang inclination, and defiance towards authority. Four major theories—segmented assimilation, socio-ecological theory, intersectionality, and critical race theory—served as framework for the analysis of the risk factors that may lead young African immigrants to follow the downward assimilation path. The analysis reveals the need for intervention measures at the federal, state, and school levels to reduce the vulnerability of non-predominant minority youth in US school settings and the moral responsibility of school authorities to ensure their welfare. Recommended preventive measures include (1) educating immigrant families and school communities; (2) encouraging collaboration and dialogue between African community organizations, school administration, and policymakers purported at creating a favorable school climate for the marginalized African immigrant youth; (3) increasing intervention measures, such as school-community mediation and political representation.

Publisher

IGI Global

Reference107 articles.

1. Seeking to be heard: An African-born, American-raised child’s tale of struggle, invisibility, and invincibility;M.Agyepong;Reprocessing race, language and ability: African-born educators and students in transnational America,2013

2. Albuquerque Public Schools. (n.d.). Foreign exchange and nonimmigrant foreign students. Available: http://www.aps.edu/about-us/policies-and-procedural-directives/procedural-directives/j.-students/foreign-exchange-and-non-immigrant-foreign-students

3. Blacks, whites, and the cultural divide: Revelations of my American journey;M.Aman;Foreign-born African Americans: Silenced voices in the discourse on race,2002

4. Awokoya, J. (2009). “I’m not enough of anything!”: The racial and ethnic identity constructions and negotiations of one-point-five and second generation Nigerians (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). University of Maryland, College Park, MD.

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