Beating Education Barriers From the Caribbean to the U.S.
I am the only daughter of two Latino immigrants from the At the age of 14, I went back to live with my mother. I went to school in
I started high school with no knowledge of the English language other than the words "yes" and "thank you." For the first half of the year, I remember my cousins helped me do my homework so that I could pass to the next grade level. My grades went down, I fell into a depression and my self-esteem decreased, as did the hopes and dreams I brought from the It was very frustrating for me when a teacher said something that I couldn't understand. Sometimes I froze when they'd ask me a question, and I felt badly when they asked, "Do you understand me?" It was like being in a nightmare, but it was real life. But I managed to defeat the language barrier, and by the end of the year, I was speaking Spanglish (Spanish and English). Plus, I had my first job as a sales associate at a department store. The language was not the only issue I had in education; I had to adapt to a completely different school environment from the one I had experienced. That was a real challenge for me because I came from a very small town where, for most of the population, education has many limitations because of economical factors. I must confess that I didn't even know how to turn a computer on, but I found out and I learned to type quickly. Peer pressure was another issue, as was racial bias. Discrimination is one of the biggest reasons that many immigrant students face problems in schools nowadays. According to a 2007 study in The International Migration Review, students who come from immigrant families and are from disadvantaged races are more likely to experience discrimination in the In my opinion, many immigrant parents don't get too involved in their children's school activities because many of them spend the majority of their day working and don't have time to participate in such activities. Many members of my family have to leave their children with a babysitter because they have to work and sustain their families. Also, many children of Latino immigrants are forced to work to pay their tuition or to help with their parents' expenses while going to school, as I had to do. I think that some of us don't overcome these issues because many Americans don't view us as competent human beings. The perception that many Americans share about Latino immigrants is that because we come from other countries, we may not have the capacity to succeed and obtain a college degree. Today, I am just one semester away from achieving my goals and obtaining my bachelor's degree. I have fought the education barriers in After only seven years living in this country, I am pursuing my dreams; many Latino students like me don't even get a high-school diploma. This may be because their parents can't provide them with the opportunity or because of racial bias and education inequities in this country that make it impossible for many of us to reach the so-called American dream. |