Using examples of students in Mexico who used to attend US schools and examples from Georgia of students who used to and might again attend Mexican schools, this chapter considers how an unremarkable, quotidian activity—the act of attending school—can become means for transnationally mobile children to experience shock, disconnection, and a reiterated sense of dislocation if schools are incompletely responsive to learners\u27 biographies
Thousands of Mexican students commute from Mexico to the United States each day to attend school. So...
Educating for a future that assumes students will be educated in the country where they were born or...
Center for Comparative Immigration Studies Abstract. This presentation analyzes how first generation...
Students in Mexican schools with previous experience in US schools are transnational students. To th...
The literature in international migration from Mexico to the U.S. has usually examined labor, juridi...
There are many school-age children involved in the transnational movement of peoples between the Uni...
In 1997, when we first met while independently conducting field work in Whitfield County, Georgia, a...
This chapter from the edited volume The Students We Share explains to both US and Mexican audience...
We use 3 brief educational biographies of students in Mexico who have previously attended public sch...
Increasingly, emigrants from Mexico to the United States are taking their children with them when th...
Young immigrant youth often live their lives across borders, either by physically crossing them for ...
The movement of Mexicans to the United States is both longstanding and long studied and from that st...
In this study I examined school experiences of recent immigrant students who came to the Ollin South...
Research Problem Over 500,000 U.S.-born children are living in Mexico –some due to parental deportat...
English language learners are a diverse and fast-growing segment of the student population in the Un...
Thousands of Mexican students commute from Mexico to the United States each day to attend school. So...
Educating for a future that assumes students will be educated in the country where they were born or...
Center for Comparative Immigration Studies Abstract. This presentation analyzes how first generation...
Students in Mexican schools with previous experience in US schools are transnational students. To th...
The literature in international migration from Mexico to the U.S. has usually examined labor, juridi...
There are many school-age children involved in the transnational movement of peoples between the Uni...
In 1997, when we first met while independently conducting field work in Whitfield County, Georgia, a...
This chapter from the edited volume The Students We Share explains to both US and Mexican audience...
We use 3 brief educational biographies of students in Mexico who have previously attended public sch...
Increasingly, emigrants from Mexico to the United States are taking their children with them when th...
Young immigrant youth often live their lives across borders, either by physically crossing them for ...
The movement of Mexicans to the United States is both longstanding and long studied and from that st...
In this study I examined school experiences of recent immigrant students who came to the Ollin South...
Research Problem Over 500,000 U.S.-born children are living in Mexico –some due to parental deportat...
English language learners are a diverse and fast-growing segment of the student population in the Un...
Thousands of Mexican students commute from Mexico to the United States each day to attend school. So...
Educating for a future that assumes students will be educated in the country where they were born or...
Center for Comparative Immigration Studies Abstract. This presentation analyzes how first generation...