Category: Research

  • Research papers on mylanguage.ca

    mylanguage.ca is dedicated to raising the importance of home language (L1) retention as a tool to support the development of English in newcomer children. The site, developed by Dr. Roma Chumak-Horbatsch of Ryerson University’s School of Early Childhood Education has recently been updated and two new research studies by Dr. Chumak-Horbatsch have been added:

    Early bilingualism: Children of immigrants in an English-language childcare center. (2008). Psychology of Language and Communication. Vol 12, No. 1.
    Mmmmm…I like English: Linguistic behaviors of Ukranian-English bilingual children. (2006). Psychology of Language and Communication. Vol 10, No. 2. 

    Visit mylanguage.ca to download both papers.

  • Special issue of Research in Comparative and International Education

    Vol 3, No. 3 (2008) of the Research in Comparative and International Education journal is devoted to early childhood education and care, with several articles addressing issues related to immigrant, migrant, transnational children. Abstracts taken from the RCIE website:

    Not just content, but style: Gypsy children traversing boundaries. Martin P. Levinson, University of Exeter, UK

    The policy to integrate English Gypsy children in schools tends to overlook the difficulties facing such youngsters in their attempts to negotiate between contrasting practices and values at home and school. Contradictions between such practices/value systems at home and school entail not only knowledge/skills, but also differing modes of instruction/transmission. Informed by learning theories and New Literacy discourse, along with evidence from previous accounts of Romani learning practices in the home context, this article draws on findings from an ethnographic study of English Gypsies (1996?2000), and data from a follow-up study, involving original and additional participants (2005?6). The article explores attitudes across age-groups, outlining, in particular, the knowledge/skill base valued in the home setting, highlighting the mismatch between home and school expectations, and the difference of expectation in child–adult relations in each context. It argues that policy-makers need to consider the wider impact of school education on identity and group membership.

    Tracing global–local Transitions within early childhood curriculum and practice in India. Anita Gupta, School of Education, City College of New York, US
    Taking the view that curriculum and pedagogy are complex processes related to history, politics, economics, culture and knowledge, and influenced by interactions that occur between students, teachers and the larger communities, this article will discuss how curriculum takes shape and is negotiated in some early childhood classrooms in post-colonial urban India. The article draws on empirical and published research, and includes a discussion on the influence of recent local and global forces on teaching and learning, focusing specifically on issues such as: the deep divide between private and public education in India; the challenge of sustaining local government schools in India in the face of the global emphasis placed on knowledge of the English language; the recent increase in the emergence of private schools in low- as well as high-socio-economic-class neighborhoods in India; the more recent neo-colonial influences of western media on children’s lives in their homes and schools; and early childhood teachers’ perceptions on the transitions between ‘western’ and ‘Indian’ values.

    Understanding childhoods in-between: Sudanese refugee children’s transition from home to preschool. Darcey M. Dachyshyn, Eastern Washington University, USA and Anna Kirova, University of Alberta, CA

    Canada receives over 30,000 refugees each year, approximately 10% of whom are under five years of age. While to varying degrees the factors influencing the experiences of adult refugees have been identified and researched, the experiences of young refugee children ‘living in-between’ has only recently begun to capture researchers’ interest. This article considers what the experiences are of young refugee children in their day-to-day living between languages and cultures as they make a transition between home and Canadian early childhood settings. More specifically, the question addressed is: What roles do refugee children play in mediating the host culture for their parents in the hybrid place created by play? The authors propose that play in early childhood does serve, for refugees experiencing resettlement, as a site of cultural mediation, contestation, and identity negotiation. An analysis of three Sudanese refugee mothers and their four-year-old sons’ use of common early childhood artefacts – wooden building blocks – is used to demonstrate how young refugee children who experience child care outside their home for the first time not only learn to ‘be a preschooler’, but learn to ‘interpret’ this role to their parents.

  • Immigration-related data at Statistics Canada

    Statistics Canada has assembled a useful page of links for researchers. The page – entitled Ethnic diversity and immigration – contains information on:

    – ethnic groups
    – visible minorities
    -immigrants and non-permanent residents
    – generation status in Canada (first generation, second generation, third generation or longer)
    – citizenship
    – education, training, and skills
    – labour market and income
    – health status and access to health care
    – integration of newcomers
    – knowledge and use of languages
    – immigration history
    – religion
    – civic participation, attitudes, values, and social networks
    – perceived discrimination and unfair treatment.

  • Ethnically diverse schools = less prejudice among young children

    UK-based Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) has released findings of a study on the ethnic make-up of the school environment and its impact on children’s tolerance, prejudices and approach to diversity. The more diverse, the more children take on what the study calls an “integrationist orientation”.
    The study found that children as young as 5 had an integrationist orientation, if exposed to cultures other than their own and that schools with a high ethnically-diverse make up had clear benefits for all children.
    Lead researcher Rupert Brown, quoted on the egovmonitor.com website:

    “We found that when the proportion of ethnic minority children in a school is at least 20%, both ethnic minority children and majority children tended to have higher self esteem, children had more friendships with children from other ethnic groups, and there were fewer problems with peer relationships such as bullying”.
    “Our findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that the more contact children have with other ethnic groups, the more cross-group friendships they will have and the less prejudiced they will be”.

  • Homelessness and housing: Immigrant, non-status & Canadian mothers

    The Centre for Urban and Community Studies, University of Toronto will launch a report July 24th detailing a year’s study on homelessness and housing issues for immigrant, non-status and Canadian-born mothers with young children. From the announcement: “the results reveal the complex causes and effects of homelessness for families with children, and the ways in which these differ between women who are Canadian-born, immigrant women with status and migrant women without status“.  
    The launch begins with a 10am press conference at the YWCA, 80 Woodlawn Ave in Toronto. From 11-1pm a lunch and learn session will include:

    RSVP by July 18th to s.batacharya@utoronto.ca.

  • Harvard study on immigrant children in the US

    The Harvard Graduate School of Education has released results of a 5 year study on immigrant children in the United States. Among the findings: immigrant girls tend to fare better than immigrant boys. A Newsweek article, reporting on the study, quotes researcher Marcelo Suarez-Orozco: “girls are able to retain some of the protective features of their native culture because they’re kept closer to the hearth while they maximize their acquisition of skills in the new culture by helping their parents navigate it“.
    Related link: Immigration Studies @ NYU, devoted to the study of immigration with a focus on children, youth and families.

  • 2nd annual Metropolis research competition

    This year’s Metropolis Canada research competition is asking the question how has large-scale immigration transformed Canada’s society and economy?
    Some key dimensions of this question, relevant to research in the immigrant children and families area include the following (taken from the Metropolis site), include:

    How has immigration influenced policies of taxation and the provision of social goods and services such as public education and healthcare?
    What is the impact of immigration on Canadian social relations, including perspectives on family and friends, the discourse on individual and group rights, and inter-ethnic, inter-racil, and inter-religious relations?
    What impact has large-scale immigration had on Canadian social policy, e.g., the choice between the state, the community, and the family as service provider?

    Up to $125,000 for 12-18 months is available for researchers affiliated with any Metropolis Centre and a post-secondary educational institution. Here’s an opportunity for researchers interested in immigrant children and families. See the SSHRC site for details.
    Application deadline is September 30, 2008.
    For more information, contact the SSHRC Program Officer, Mika Oehling at 613.992.4227 or mika.oehling@sshrc.ca.

  • UK report: Safeguarding children who may have been trafficked

    A resource by the UK Home Office in response to their UK Action Plan on Tackling Human Trafficking. The Action Plan included a commitment to provide guidance, information and resources for agencies who work with children who may have been trafficked. The resource is now available at the childtrafficking.com site.

  • CERIS announces new domain leader for Family, Children & Youth

    More news from CERIS. 4 new domain leaders have been announced, including Dr. Francis Hare as the new Domain Leader for Family, Children and Youth.
    Dr. Hare founded and taught in the Child and Youth program at Ryerson University in Toronto. He has also taught in Ryerson’s Masters in Early Childhood Studies and the Masters in Immigration and Settlement Studies. His research interests include unaccompanied minors, child refugees and the issue of trafficking.
    Congratulations, Dr. Hare.

  • Social support networks: A study on recent Chinese immigrant mothers and children

    CERIS (The Joint Centre of Excellent for Research in Immigration Studies and Ontario Metropolis centre) has released a new research working paper (No. 66). Development of Social Support Networks by Recent Chinese Immigrant Women with Young Children Living in London, Ontario is a research study conducted by Wei Wei Da. The study was guided by two research questions:

    Where do recent Chinese immigrant women with young children go for information on child-rearing?
    Where and to whom do they turn to when they want help in raising young children in a new socio-cultural context?