Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
955952 | Social Science Research | 2012 | 18 Pages |
Scholars of immigration disagree about the role ethnic communities play in immigrant families’ engagement in educational institutions. While some researchers argue that the concentration of disadvantaged ethnic groups may prevent meaningful engagement with schools, others argue that ethnic communities can possess resources that help immigrant families be involved in their children’s schooling. In this study we use a nationally representative dataset of Hispanic children from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Cohort (ECLS-K) to determine if the relative size of the Hispanic population in the school affects levels of their parents’ involvement in their education, as well as parents’ perceptions of barriers to their involvement. Our results suggest that a large Hispanic presence in a child’s school can help increase immigrant Hispanic parents’ involvement in their children’s schooling, but there are no benefits for US-born Hispanic parents, indicating that ethnic communities help immigrant families acculturate to American institutions.
► We model how schools’ Hispanic concentration affects Hispanic parental involvement. ► Immigrant parents are more involved in schools with a greater Hispanic presence. ► Hispanic presence has no effect on Hispanic US-born parents. ► These benefits for immigrant parents are not explained by school services. ► A larger Hispanic presence promotes social capital among immigrant parents.