“At School, It's a Completely Different World”: African Immigrant Youth Agency and Negotiation of Their Adaptation Processes in US Urban Schools

Author:

Kiramba Lydiah Kananu1ORCID,Traore Hanihani Moundiba1,Trainin Guy1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education, College of Education and Human Sciences, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA

Abstract

African immigrant youth adaptation processes in US schools remain under-researched. Using qualitative case study, this article examines West African immigrant middle- and high-school youth adaptation experiences in US urban schools. Findings show that racialized experiences, English proficiency levels, and multilingualism affected social relationships (both supportive and conflicted) with families, communities, peers, and school contexts. These experiences crucially influenced African immigrant youths’ adaptation processes. Participants drew from community resources and developed resilience skills to negotiate acculturative stressors when seeking friendship, belonging, and an integrated sense of identity in their new home. Recommendations for further supporting positive adaptive strategies are discussed.

Funder

NU-Wide Africa Research Initiative Grant

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Education

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