Sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership

Immigrant students and families are increasingly becoming important members of our education system. In 2014, Canada welcomed more than 200,000 newcomers (Citizenship & Immigration Canada, 2015). The experience and success of immigrant students has been linked to many school and home factors (Al...

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Main Author: Rahimi Fard Jahromi, Seyedeh Dorna
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/61223
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-612232018-01-05T17:29:39Z Sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership Rahimi Fard Jahromi, Seyedeh Dorna Immigrant students and families are increasingly becoming important members of our education system. In 2014, Canada welcomed more than 200,000 newcomers (Citizenship & Immigration Canada, 2015). The experience and success of immigrant students has been linked to many school and home factors (Alexander, Entwisle, & Thompson, 1987; Fuligini, 1997). Culturally based explanations of success argue that immigrant students’ success and experiences in school can be fully explained by their race or socioeconomic status (Trueba, 1988). The effectiveness of their home (family) and school environments should also be considered (Trueba, 1988). Research has also demonstrated that immigrant families contribute to their child’s education in different ways (Fuligni, 1997; Lopez, 2001). Therefore, family-school partnership is very integral to immigrant students’ success. While schools have focused on different ways of integrating students and families in schools, some scholars argue that studying how immigrant individuals experience sense of belonging is a more appropriate direction (Hurtado & Carter, 1997). However, research is unclear on how immigrant families, who are new members of the community, can become part of the school community (Puig, Erwin, Evenson, & Beresford, 2015). Employing an Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis, this study used semi-structured interviews to explore immigrant families’ perceptions and experiences of sense of belonging in their child’s school, and teachers’ perceptions of sense of belonging for school community members and experiences of enhancing sense of belonging for immigrant families. The findings suggest that families perceive sense of belonging as being informed, having a support system, and feeling emotionally safe. They experienced sense of belonging in their children’s schools when they felt included, and had effective communication. Teachers perceived that sense of belonging for school community members means having a welcoming environment. Teachers also discussed communication and relationship building as some of the strategies they use in enhancing sense of belonging for immigrant parents. Relevance of these findings with their implications in a broader sociocultural understanding is discussed. Education, Faculty of Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of Graduate 2017-04-13T19:16:44Z 2017-04-13T19:16:44Z 2017 2017-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/61223 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
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language English
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description Immigrant students and families are increasingly becoming important members of our education system. In 2014, Canada welcomed more than 200,000 newcomers (Citizenship & Immigration Canada, 2015). The experience and success of immigrant students has been linked to many school and home factors (Alexander, Entwisle, & Thompson, 1987; Fuligini, 1997). Culturally based explanations of success argue that immigrant students’ success and experiences in school can be fully explained by their race or socioeconomic status (Trueba, 1988). The effectiveness of their home (family) and school environments should also be considered (Trueba, 1988). Research has also demonstrated that immigrant families contribute to their child’s education in different ways (Fuligni, 1997; Lopez, 2001). Therefore, family-school partnership is very integral to immigrant students’ success. While schools have focused on different ways of integrating students and families in schools, some scholars argue that studying how immigrant individuals experience sense of belonging is a more appropriate direction (Hurtado & Carter, 1997). However, research is unclear on how immigrant families, who are new members of the community, can become part of the school community (Puig, Erwin, Evenson, & Beresford, 2015). Employing an Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis, this study used semi-structured interviews to explore immigrant families’ perceptions and experiences of sense of belonging in their child’s school, and teachers’ perceptions of sense of belonging for school community members and experiences of enhancing sense of belonging for immigrant families. The findings suggest that families perceive sense of belonging as being informed, having a support system, and feeling emotionally safe. They experienced sense of belonging in their children’s schools when they felt included, and had effective communication. Teachers perceived that sense of belonging for school community members means having a welcoming environment. Teachers also discussed communication and relationship building as some of the strategies they use in enhancing sense of belonging for immigrant parents. Relevance of these findings with their implications in a broader sociocultural understanding is discussed. === Education, Faculty of === Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of === Graduate
author Rahimi Fard Jahromi, Seyedeh Dorna
spellingShingle Rahimi Fard Jahromi, Seyedeh Dorna
Sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership
author_facet Rahimi Fard Jahromi, Seyedeh Dorna
author_sort Rahimi Fard Jahromi, Seyedeh Dorna
title Sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership
title_short Sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership
title_full Sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership
title_fullStr Sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership
title_full_unstemmed Sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership
title_sort sense of belonging and immigrant parents : strengthening the family-school partnership
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/61223
work_keys_str_mv AT rahimifardjahromiseyedehdorna senseofbelongingandimmigrantparentsstrengtheningthefamilyschoolpartnership
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