journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21465861/the-physical-and-psychological-well-being-of-immigrant-children
#61
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Krista M Perreira, India J Ornelas
Poor childhood health contributes to lower socioeconomic status in adulthood. Subsequently, low socioeconomic status among parents contributes to poor childhood health outcomes in the next generation. This cycle can be particularly pernicious for vulnerable and low-income minority populations, including many children of immigrants. And because of the rapid growth in the numbers of immigrant children, this cycle also has implications for the nation as a whole. By promoting the physical well-being and emotional health of children of immigrants, health professionals and policy makers can ultimately improve the long-term economic prospects of the next generation...
2011: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21465860/higher-education-and-children-in-immigrant-families
#62
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Sandy Baum, Stella M Flores
The increasing role that immigrants and their children, especially those from Latin America, are playing in American society, Sandy Baum and Stella Flores argue, makes it essential that as many young newcomers as possible enroll and succeed in postsecondary education. Immigrant youths from some countries find the doors to the nation's colleges wide open. But other groups, such as those from Latin America, Laos, and Cambodia, often fail to get a postsecondary education. Immigration status itself is not a hindrance...
2011: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21465859/immigrants-in-community-colleges
#63
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert T Teranishi, Carola Suárez-Orozco, Marcelo Suárez-Orozco
Immigrant youth and children of immigrants make up a large and increasing share of the nation's population, and over the next few decades they will constitute a significant portion of the U.S. workforce. Robert Teranishi, Carola Suárez-Orozco, and Marcelo Suárez-Orozco argue that increasing their educational attainment, economic productivity, and civic engagement should thus be a national priority. Community colleges offer one particularly important venue for achieving this objective. Because they are conveniently located, cost much less than four-year colleges, feature open admissions, and accommodate students who work or have family responsibilities, community colleges are well suited to meet the educational needs of immigrants who want to obtain an affordable postsecondary education, learn English-language skills, and prepare for the labor market...
2011: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21465858/k-12-educational-outcomes-of-immigrant-youth
#64
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Crosnoe, Ruth N López Turley
The children from immigrant families in the United States make up a historically diverse population, and they are demonstrating just as much diversity in their experiences in the K-12 educational system. Robert Crosnoe and Ruth López Turley summarize these K-12 patterns, paying special attention to differences in academic functioning across segments of the immigrant population defined by generational status, race and ethnicity, and national origin. A good deal of evidence points to an immigrant advantage in multiple indicators of academic progress, meaning that many youths from immigrant families outperform their peers in school...
2011: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21465857/effective-instruction-for-english-learners
#65
REVIEW
Margarita Calderón, Robert Slavin, Marta Sánchez
The fastest-growing student population in U.S. schools today is children of immigrants, half of whom do not speak English fluently and are thus labeled English learners. Although the federal government requires school districts to provide services to English learners, it offers states no policies to follow in identifying, assessing, placing, or instructing them. Margarita Calderón, Robert Slavin, and Marta Sánchez identify the elements of effective instruction and review a variety of successful program models...
2011: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21465856/early-care-and-education-for-children-in-immigrant-families
#66
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lynn A Karoly, Gabriella C Gonzalez
A substantial and growing share of the population, immigrant children are more likely than children with native-born parents to face a variety of circumstances, such as low family income, low parental education, and language barriers that place them at risk of developmental delay and poor academic performance once they enter school. Lynn Karoly and Gabriella Gonzalez examine the current role of and future potential for early care and education (ECE) programs in promoting healthy development for immigrant children...
2011: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21465855/the-living-arrangements-of-children-of-immigrants
#67
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nancy S Landale, Kevin J A Thomas, Jennifer Van Hook
Children of immigrants are a rapidly growing part of the U.S. child population. Their health, development, educational attainment, and social and economic integration into the nation's life will play a defining role in the nation's future. Nancy Landale, Kevin Thomas, and Jennifer Van Hook explore the challenges facing immigrant families as they adapt to the United States, as well as their many strengths, most notably high levels of marriage and family commitment. The authors examine differences by country of origin in the human capital, legal status, and social resources of immigrant families and describe their varied living arrangements, focusing on children of Mexican, Southeast Asian, and black Caribbean origin...
2011: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21465854/demography-of-immigrant-youth-past-present-and-future
#68
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeffrey S Passel
Jeffrey Passel surveys demographic trends and projections in the U.S. youth population, with an emphasis on trends among immigrant youth. He traces shifts in the youth population over the past hundred years, examines population projections through 2050, and offers some observations about the likely impact of the immigrant youth population on American society. Passel provides data on the legal status of immigrant youth and their families and on their geographic distribution and concentration across the United States...
2011: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964138/marriage-and-fatherhood-programs
#69
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Philip A Cowan, Carolyn Pape Cowan, Virginia Knox
To improve the quality and stability of couple and father-child relationships in fragile families, researchers are beginning to consider how to tailor existing couple-relationship and father-involvement interventions, which are now targeted on married couples, to the specific needs of unwed couples in fragile families. The goal, explain Philip Cowan, Carolyn Pape Cowan, and Virginia Knox, is to provide a more supportive developmental context for mothers, fathers, and, especially, the children in fragile families...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964137/unmarried-parents-in-college
#70
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara Goldrick-Rab, Kia Sorensen
Noting that access to higher education has expanded dramatically in the past several decades, Sara Goldrick-Rab and Kia Sorensen focus on how unmarried parents fare once they enter college. Contrary to the expectation that access to college consistently promotes family stability and economic security, the authors argue that deficiencies in current policy lead college attendance to have adverse consequences for some families headed by unmarried parents. Although rates of college attendance have increased substantially among unmarried parents, their college completion rates are low...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964136/incarceration-in-fragile-families
#71
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher Wildeman, Bruce Western
Since the mid-1970s the U.S. imprisonment rate has increased roughly fivefold. As Christopher Wildeman and Bruce Western explain, the effects of this sea change in the imprisonment rate--commonly called mass imprisonment or the prison boom--have been concentrated among those most likely to form fragile families: poor and minority men with little schooling. Imprisonment diminishes the earnings of adult men, compromises their health, reduces familial resources, and contributes to family breakup. It also adds to the deficits of poor children, thus ensuring that the effects of imprisonment on inequality are transferred intergenerationally...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964135/an-ounce-of-prevention-policy-prescriptions-to-reduce-the-prevalence-of-fragile-families
#72
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Isabel Sawhill, Adam Thomas, Emily Monea
Isabel Sawhill, Adam Thomas, and Emily Monea believe that given the well-documented costs of nonmarital births to the children and parents in fragile families, as well as to society as a whole, policy makers' primary goal should be to reduce births to unmarried parents. The authors say that the nation's swiftly rising nonmarital birth rate has many explanations--a cultural shift toward acceptance of unwed childbearing; a lack of positive alternatives to motherhood among the less advantaged; a sense of fatalism or ambivalence about pregnancy; a lack of marriageable men; limited access to effective contraception; a lack of knowledge about contraception; and the difficulty of using contraception consistently and correctly...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964134/race-and-ethnicity-in-fragile-families
#73
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Robert A Hummer, Erin R Hamilton
Robert Hummer and Erin Hamilton note that the prevalence of fragile families varies substantially by race and ethnicity. African Americans and Hispanics have the highest prevalence; Asian Americans, the lowest; and whites fall somewhere in the middle. The share of unmarried births is lower among most foreign-born mothers than among their U.S.-born ethnic counterparts. Immigrant-native differences are particularly large for Asians, whites, and blacks. The authors also find racial and ethnic differences in the composition and stability of fragile families over time...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964133/fragile-families-and-child-wellbeing
#74
REVIEW
Jane Waldfogel, Terry-Ann Craigie, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn
Jane Waldfogel, Terry-Ann Craigie, and Jeanne Brooks-Gunn review recent studies that use data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS) to examine why children who grow up in single-mother and cohabiting families fare worse than children born into married-couple households. They also present findings from their own new research. Analysts have investigated five key pathways through which family structure might influence child well-being: parental resources, parental mental health, parental relationship quality, parenting quality, and father involvement...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964132/capabilities-and-contributions-of-unwed-fathers
#75
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert I Lerman
Young, minority, and poorly educated fathers in fragile families have little capacity to support their children financially and are hard-pressed to maintain stability in raising those children. In this article, Robert Lerman examines the capabilities and contributions of unwed fathers, how their capabilities and contributions fall short of those of married fathers, how those capabilities and contributions differ by the kind of relationship the fathers have with their child's mother, and how they change as infants grow into toddlers and kindergartners...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964131/mothers-economic-conditions-and-sources-of-support-in-fragile-families
#76
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ariel Kalil, Rebecca M Ryan
Rising rates of nonmarital childbirth in the United States have resulted in a new family type, the fragile family. Such families, which include cohabiting couples as well as single mothers, experience significantly higher rates of poverty and material hardship than their married counterparts. Ariel Kalil and Rebecca Ryan summarize the economic challenges facing mothers in fragile families and describe the resources, both public and private, that help them meet these challenges. The authors explain that the economic fragility of these families stems from both mothers' and fathers' low earnings, which result from low education levels, as well as from physical, emotional, and mental health problems...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20964130/parental-relationships-in-fragile-families
#77
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sara McLanahan, Audrey N Beck
As nonmarital childbearing escalated in the United States over the past half century, fragile families--defined as unmarried couples with children--drew increased interest from researchers and policy makers. Sara McLanahan and Audrey Beck discuss four aspects of parental relationships in these families: the quality of parents' intimate relationship, the stability of that relationship, the quality of the co-parenting relationship among parents who live apart, and nonresident fathers' involvement with their child...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20364628/vulnerable-populations-and-the-transition-to-adulthood
#78
JOURNAL ARTICLE
D Wayne Osgood, E Michael Foster, Mark E Courtney
D. Wayne Osgood, E. Michael Foster, and Mark E. Courtney examine the transition to adulthood for youth involved in social service and justice systems during childhood and adolescence. They survey the challenges faced by youth in the mental health system, the foster care system, the juvenile justice system, the criminal justice system, and special education, and by youth with physical disabilities and chronic illness, as well as runaway and homeless youth. One problem is that the services these vulnerable populations receive from these systems as children and adolescents often end abruptly as they transition to adulthood, even though the need for them continues...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20364627/the-military-and-the-transition-to-adulthood
#79
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryan Kelty, Meredith Kleykamp, David R Segal
Ryan Kelty, Meredith Kleykamp, and David Segal examine the effect of military service on the transition to adulthood. They highlight changes since World War II in the role of the military in the lives of young adults, focusing especially on how the move from a conscription to an all-volunteer military has changed the way military service affects youths' approach to adult responsibilities. The authors note that today's all-volunteer military is both career-oriented and family-oriented, and they show how the material and social support the military provides to young servicemen and women promotes responsible membership in family relationships and the wider community...
2010: Future of Children
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20364626/civic-engagement-and-the-transition-to-adulthood
#80
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Constance Flanagan, Peter Levine
Constance Flanagan and Peter Levine survey research on civic engagement among U.S. adolescents and young adults. Civic engagement, they say, is important both for the functioning of democracies and for the growth and maturation it encourages in young adults, but opportunities for civic engagement are not evenly distributed by social class or race and ethnicity. Today's young adults, note the authors, are less likely than those in earlier generations to exhibit many important characteristics of citizenship, raising the question of whether these differences represent a decline or simply a delay in traditional adult patterns of civic engagement...
2010: Future of Children
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