ABSTRACT

Currently, linguistic minority students – students who speak a language other than English at home – represent 21% of the entire K-12 student population and 11% of the college student population. Bringing together emerging scholarship on the growing number of college-bound linguistic minority students in the K-12 pipeline, this ground-breaking volume showcases new research on these students’ preparation for, access to, and persistence in college.

Other than studies of their linguistic challenges and writing and academic literacy skills in college, little is known about the broader issues of linguistic minority students’ access to and success in college. Examining a variety of factors and circumstances that influence the process and outcome, the scope of this book goes beyond students’ language proficiency and its impact on college education, to look at issues such as student race/ethnicity, gender, SES, and parental education and expectations. It also addresses structural factors in schooling including tracking, segregation of English learners from English-fluent peers, availability and support of institutional personnel, and collegiate student identity and campus climate.

Presenting state-of-the-art knowledge and mapping out a future research agenda in an extremely important and yet understudied area of inquiry, this book advances knowledge in ways that will have a real impact on policy regarding linguistic minority immigrant students’ higher education opportunities.

part |74 pages

College Preparation in High School

chapter |19 pages

High SchooI ESL Placement

Practice, Policy, and Effects on Achievement

chapter |19 pages

Paving the Way to College

An Analysis of an International Baccalaureate Diploma Program Serving Immigrant Students in California

chapter |17 pages

How Paola Made it to College

A Linguistic Minority Student's Unlikely Success Story

part |92 pages

College Experiences and Persistence

chapter |19 pages

Navigating “Open Access” Community Colleges

Matriculation Policies and Practices for U.S.-Educated Linguistic Minority Students

chapter |19 pages

Contextualizing the Path to Academic Success

Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students Gaining Voice and Agency in Higher Education

chapter |18 pages

Benefits and Costs of Exercising Agency

A Case Study of an English Learner Navigating a Four-Year University

chapter |17 pages

Citizens vs. Aliens

How Institutional Policies Construct Linguistic Minority Students