Buch


Conceptual and Methodological Approaches to Navigating Immigrant Ecologies

Conceptual and Methodological Approaches to Navigating Immigrant Ecologies

Hui Chu; Barbara Thelamour (Hrsg.)

 

53,49 EUR
Lieferzeit 12-13 Tage



53,49 EUR
Lieferzeit 12-13 Tage



Autorinformation
Inhaltsverzeichnis


Übersicht


Verlag : Springer International Publishing
Buchreihe : Advances in Immigrant Family Research
Sprache : Englisch
Erschienen : 08. 12. 2020
Seiten : 352
Einband : Gebunden
Höhe : 235 mm
Breite : 155 mm
ISBN : 9783030502348
Sprache : Englisch

Du und »Conceptual and Methodological Approaches to Navigating Immigrant Ecologies«




Autorinformation


Dr. Hui Chu is currently an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Purdue University Northwest in Westville, Indiana. She received her baccalaureate in Psychology with a minor in Applied Developmental Psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles. At the University of Kentucky, Lexington, U.S., she received her Masters of Science and Ph.D. in Social and Developmental Psychology. Her research focuses on immigrants’ experiences including perceived discrimination, ethnic identity development, acculturation and how factors such as social support (peers and teachers) affect outcomes such mental, physical and educational outcomes. Specifically, she has worked with Latino, Asian, and Jamaican populations to identify these risky and buffering factors and further examining immigrant parents’ and children’s experiences within the classroom and family contexts.  Her other area of research examines individual differences in people’s perceptions of immigrants and immigration and examines differences in prejudicial attitudes towards either authorized immigrants or unauthorized immigrants. Dr. Chu has published in Child Development, Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, the International Journal of Social Science and Humanity, and Gender Roles in Immigrant Families. She is a reviewer for Child Development and a couple of developmental textbooks for Sage Publications. She has also reviewed for several conferences and grants including the Society for Research in Child Development and the National Conference of Undergraduate Research.

Dr. Barbara Thelamour is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Swarthmore College. She received her PhD from Michigan State University in Educational Psychology, and her B.A. in Psychology and a minor in Spanish at Emory University. Her mixed-methods research focuses on the socialization process and identity development of Black immigrant youth, particularly in relation to Black American culture as the receiving culture. In her second line of research, the emphasis is on the educational experiences and outcomes of immigrants and other students of color. Her work has focused on adolescents and emerging adults. Across these research endeavors, she has highlighted how relationships with others, particularly parents, peers, and teachers, facilitate or hinder these identity, acculturation, and learning processes. Thelamour has published in the Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology, the Journal of Black Psychology, the Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, and Urban Education. She has also reviewed for several conferences, including the American Psychological Association, National Multicultural Conference and Summit, the Society for Research in Child Development, and the American Education Research Association meetings.      

Inhaltsverzeichnis


Introduction: Contextualizing immigration using Bioecological Systems Theory.- “Location, location, location”: Contextualizing Chinese families in four geolocations.- Part One: Person.- Using an ecological framework to contextualize the bicultural experiences and identity of Asian Indian immigrant mothers and their children.- Identity and belonging: The role of the mesosystem in the adaptation of Russian-speaking immigrant youth in Canada.- The ecology of dating preferences among Asian American adolescents in emerging immigrant communities.- Social representations of Blackness in America: Stereotypes about Black immigrants and Black Americans.- A mixed-methods examination of acculturation and African immigrants’ perceptions of Black American culture.- Part Two: Home.- Korean American youth and their mothers: Intergenerational differences and consequences.- “How do we raise Chinese kids here?”:  A qualitative study on the cultural translation of immigrant Chinese parents in the Midwestern U.S. context.- A tale of two cultures: Nigerian immigrant parents navigating a new cultural paradigm.- Part 3: School.- Demand and direct involvement: Chinese American and European American preschoolers’ perceptions of parental involvement in children’s schooling.- Neighborhood experiences of immigrant families with young children in the United States.- Index.

Deine Buchhandlung


Buchhandlung LeseLust
Inh. Gernod Siering

Georgenstraße 2
99817 Eisenach

03691/733822
kontakt@leselust-eisenach.de

Montag-Freitag 9-17 Uhr
Sonnabend 10-14 Uhr



Deine Buchhandlung
Buchhandlung LeseLust
Inh. Gernod Siering

Georgenstraße 2
99817 Eisenach

03691/733822
kontakt@leselust-eisenach.de

Montag-Freitag 9-17 Uhr
Sonnabend 10-14 Uhr