Publication | Closed Access
Poverty, loss, and resilience: The story of Chinese immigrant youth.
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Citations
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References
2008
Year
EthnicityHuman MigrationFamily InvolvementMulticultural EducationSchool CounselingEducationPoverty ReductionFamily StudiesLatino CultureCommunity ResilienceCultural IntegrationCultural DiversityPovertyYouth Well-beingMulticultural School PsychologySchool PsychologyCultural SensitivityChinese Immigrant YouthDisadvantaged BackgroundChild DevelopmentIntercultural EducationCultureGrounded TheorySociologyCross-cultural Perspective
A total of 10 focus groups were conducted with students, parents, teachers, and school counseling and support personnel to investigate the cultural adjustment process of Chinese immigrant youth using an ecological framework. Multi-informant data were analyzed using the grounded theory (A. Strauss & J. M. Corbin, 1998) method. Findings reveal 6 main themes: socioeconomic changes due to immigrant status; English proficiency as a barrier to adjustment; changes in family structure and dynamics, racism, and invisibility; challenges to social support systems; and interdependent strategies for navigating in the United States. Results highlight the dynamic interaction and tensions created across themes and ecological contexts. The need for schooland community-based counseling interventions that address Chinese immigrant youths’ losses and foster their resiliency and supportive networks are discussed.
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