Can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on English-Spanish fluent bilingualism in South Florida

This thesis studies the economic return for fluent-bilingualism in South Florida among native-born whites using IPUMS (Integrated Public Use Microdata Series) data for Miami-Dade County (1990). Previous mainstream-oriented theories focus on the benefit in English acquisition for immigrants and their...

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Main Author: Ai, Hua
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/1089
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spelling ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-22232018-07-19T03:33:47Z Can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on English-Spanish fluent bilingualism in South Florida Ai, Hua This thesis studies the economic return for fluent-bilingualism in South Florida among native-born whites using IPUMS (Integrated Public Use Microdata Series) data for Miami-Dade County (1990). Previous mainstream-oriented theories focus on the benefit in English acquisition for immigrants and their descendants, either denying or ignoring the possible benefit of minority language retention in addition to English acquisition. An alternative literature, on the other hand, suggests that minority language retention can be beneficial in at least three areas: 1) enhancing cognitive ability; 2) accessing community-level social capital; and 3) serving as human capital. This study assesses economic returns in employment and earnings, using logistic and OLS (Ordinary Least Square) regression respectively. The results, countering the mainstream-oriented theories, suggest that fluent bilingualism does have economic consequences. Rather than fully supporting the positive effects thesis, the patterns shown are much more complicated, contingent on an individual's ethnic membership and educational level. Theoretical and substantive implications are discussed and suggestions for future research are made. 1999-06-16T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/1089 FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations FIU Digital Commons Sociology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Sociology
spellingShingle Sociology
Ai, Hua
Can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on English-Spanish fluent bilingualism in South Florida
description This thesis studies the economic return for fluent-bilingualism in South Florida among native-born whites using IPUMS (Integrated Public Use Microdata Series) data for Miami-Dade County (1990). Previous mainstream-oriented theories focus on the benefit in English acquisition for immigrants and their descendants, either denying or ignoring the possible benefit of minority language retention in addition to English acquisition. An alternative literature, on the other hand, suggests that minority language retention can be beneficial in at least three areas: 1) enhancing cognitive ability; 2) accessing community-level social capital; and 3) serving as human capital. This study assesses economic returns in employment and earnings, using logistic and OLS (Ordinary Least Square) regression respectively. The results, countering the mainstream-oriented theories, suggest that fluent bilingualism does have economic consequences. Rather than fully supporting the positive effects thesis, the patterns shown are much more complicated, contingent on an individual's ethnic membership and educational level. Theoretical and substantive implications are discussed and suggestions for future research are made.
author Ai, Hua
author_facet Ai, Hua
author_sort Ai, Hua
title Can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on English-Spanish fluent bilingualism in South Florida
title_short Can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on English-Spanish fluent bilingualism in South Florida
title_full Can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on English-Spanish fluent bilingualism in South Florida
title_fullStr Can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on English-Spanish fluent bilingualism in South Florida
title_full_unstemmed Can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on English-Spanish fluent bilingualism in South Florida
title_sort can minority language proficiency pay: a study on the return on english-spanish fluent bilingualism in south florida
publisher FIU Digital Commons
publishDate 1999
url http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/1089
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