Latino parents’ educational values and STEM beliefs

Purpose This paper aims to provide a snapshot of K-12 Latino families’ beliefs about education, their awareness and interest in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) careers and their perceived educational challenges. It builds on the existent body of literature by dispelling pervasive no...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal for multicultural education 2016-01, Vol.10 (3), p.354-367
Hauptverfasser: Hernandez, Diley, Rana, Shaheen, Alemdar, Meltem, Rao, Analía, Usselman, Marion
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container_end_page 367
container_issue 3
container_start_page 354
container_title Journal for multicultural education
container_volume 10
creator Hernandez, Diley
Rana, Shaheen
Alemdar, Meltem
Rao, Analía
Usselman, Marion
description Purpose This paper aims to provide a snapshot of K-12 Latino families’ beliefs about education, their awareness and interest in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) careers and their perceived educational challenges. It builds on the existent body of literature by dispelling pervasive notions that Latino parents do not value education. It contributes to the field by providing evidence of Latino parents’ beliefs, awareness and interest in STEM careers for their children. Design/methodology/approach This study reports the results of a focus group needs assessment conducted with Latino parents, surveys and interviews collected for three years during Latino family-focused events. Findings Surveyed parents thought children should attend college to prepare for a better future and career decisions should be dependent on their preference and vocation. They believed STEM careers were important for the Latino community and reported talking to their children about having a job in STEM. Parents perceived several challenges for their children’s education, such as cost, immigration status, lack of information and language barriers. Practical implications Stereotypes regarding Latino family’s beliefs about education have implications for how school systems, educational gatekeepers and stakeholders perceive these students’ opportunities. This paper discredits the perception that Latino parents are not interested in their children attending college or pursuing STEM careers. Originality/value There is a dearth of information about Latino families’ perceptions of their children’s educational goals, knowledge of STEM careers and their interest in such fields. This paper provides a fundamental step toward filling that gap.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/JME-12-2015-0042
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source Emerald Journals - KESLI; Emerald Insight
subjects Barriers
Bilingual materials
Bilingualism
Career Choice
Careers
College Preparation
College School Cooperation
Community colleges
Costs
Culture
Educational Finance
Educational Research
Elementary Secondary Education
Ethnic Stereotypes
Families & family life
Focus Groups
Hispanic Americans
Hispanic students
Immigrants
Interviews
Language Usage
Minority students
Mixed Methods Research
Multicultural education
Noncitizens
Parent Attitudes
Parent participation
Parent Surveys
Parents & parenting
Researchers
Schools
STEM Education
STEM professions
Stereotypes
Student Motivation
Surveys
Teachers
Values
title Latino parents’ educational values and STEM beliefs
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