Newcomer student population grows
One-out-of-four students in K-12 schools is a migrant, notes Laura DuPre, a recently retired third grade teacher at the Fallbrook Union Elementary School District, in California, and a chair of the NEA Multilingual Learners Caucus. The U.S. Department of Education reports that in the 2021-22 school year there were more than five million students in U.S. schools who were English learners. The pace of migration is not slowing either.
“Migrants and immigrants need authentic, developmentally appropriate academic programs to be successful in our ever-changing global society,” DuPre says. “We believe there should be more attention given to resources that will help schools support the students.”
DuPre and her colleagues encourage districts and schools to promote a U.S. Department of Education Newcomer Toolkit packed with strategies for welcoming newcomers; supporting their social, emotional, and mental health needs; providing instruction and establishing partnerships with families; and helping “elementary and secondary teachers, principals, and other school staff who work directly with immigrant students—including asylees and refugees—and their families.”
“Newcomer students need to be appreciated and respected for what they bring to the table in regard to the culture and linguistic attributes,” DuPre says.
She says the toolkit provides fundamental information that can help educators who often aren’t equipped to support or teach newcomers, who comprise a diverse group of students with a wide variety of backgrounds and abilities and who might speak several languages other than English. Newcomers are thought of as students who have been in the country for three years or less, but DuPre says they often need support well beyond that time frame.
Another helpful resource comes from the National Newcomer Network. The network site notes that while many schools and districts have “taken great care to develop programs that elevate their strengths and aim to address their needs, they are not always evident.”
“Students may enroll in one district and receive a very different educational experience than a newcomer student enrolled in another district. This is an equity issue,” the Network argues. “Together, alongside our students and communities, we imagine a more just educational system for immigrant youth.”
Sharing Stories of Central American and Caribbean Migrants
Telling the stories of immigrants from Central America and the Caribbean region is important to Mayra Alvarado, a bilingual teacher at Manzanita SEED Elementary School in the Oakland Unified School District.
“Children suffer the most during their long journey northward,” Alvarado says. “They often arrive at shelters malnourished and dehydrated because of a lack of food and clean water. If detained by the U.S. government as they cross the border, some have been separated from their families in detention, and with cartels on the Mexican side of the border, they risk forced recruitment into cartels and gangs.” If they are deported their experience can be even more tragic.
Alvarado, along with many of her peers, wants the experiences of children and families to be known – vivid stories like the ones captured in the Dallas Morning News or at the National Tenement Museum or by UNICEF. NEA has established a site where members can offer details about the experiences of the children and families they are working with.
UNICEF tells the story of Pilar from El Progreso, Honduras, who, at age 15, was told by a classmate that she’d be killed by a gang if she didn’t work as a prostitute. Pilar’s father told UNICEF that girls are often abducted and “adolescents are dying every day” in El Progreso. “You cannot go to the police because they are in the chain of corruption,” he says.
UNICEF also describes the experience of a Honduran mother who made the decision to travel north to the U.S. because of concern for her 16- and-18-year-old daughters.
“Gang violence took the lives of one of her closest friends in 2013 and her older brother in 2015,” UNICEF reported. “Then, … her 18-year-old nephew was killed by gang members after being deported from the United States back to Honduras.”
Alvarado was motivated by her own story and her parents’ journey to the U.S.
“When my father migrated to the U.S. from El Salvador in the ‘80s to flee a civil war, he faced violence and was robbed by cartels in Mexico and was kidnapped. Unfortunately, these issues have gotten worse since then.”
Project Hope notes that the circumstances in countries across Central and South America and the Caribbean have worsened for many people who now face violence, political instability, exacerbated poverty levels due to the pandemic, or extreme weather affecting their living conditions and agriculture, which is often their livelihood.
The route migrants travel through Central America is harrowing, and some of it must be traveled on foot, the organization reports, noting that the immigrants “risk exhaustion, hunger, exposure to diseases, violence from criminal gangs, robbery, and sexual violence. Many of these risks continue upon their arrival to Mexico, including sexual abuse and human trafficking.”
Project Hope has detailed key concerns about the issue, including that the countries of origin are shifting, routes are changing, access to health care is limited, and the risk of violence from cartels continues. It notes that children suffer the most – on the trip and even at the U.S. border where they have been separated from families.
Share a Story
To draw attention to the plight of children and young people crossing the southern border, NEA has established a platform where educators can share the stories from their students and describe how they have adjusted to life in the U.S and in our schools. Fill out the form below to upload a story you believe others should hear.