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Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University of Denver [email protected]

Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

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Page 1: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for

Educational Equality

Lisa M. MartinezDept. of Sociology and Criminology

University of [email protected]

Page 2: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Still Separate and Unequal?• Educational gains• Remaining challenges• Implications– Reproduction of inequalities– Limited access and social mobility

Page 3: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Key Court Cases

Plessy

v.

Ferg

uson (1

896)

Salva

tierra

v. D

el

Rio ISD (1

930)

Alvare

z v. L

emon

Grove

Scho

ol

Distric

t (19

31)

Men

dez v

.

Wes

tmins

ter

(194

7)

Brown v.

Board

of Educa

tion

(195

4)

Keye

s v.

Scho

ol Dist

rict

No. 1 (

1973

)

Plyer

v. D

oe

(198

2)

Prop

osition

187 (

1994

)

Prop

osition

227 (

1998

)

Loba

to v.

State

of Colo

rado

(201

1)

Page 4: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Gains in Education

• Increase in high school graduation rates among 18-24 year old Latina/os

Page 5: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Gains in Education

• Increase in college enrollment rates

Page 6: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Gains in Education

• Growing share of college degrees

Page 7: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Gains in Education

• Decline in proportion of high school dropouts

Page 8: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

End of De Jure Segregation

• Latina/o and immigrant youth have made significant educational gains – High school graduation rates– College enrollment– Share of college degrees– Decline in dropout rates

Page 9: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Remaining Challenges

• Achievement gap among Latina/o youth

Page 10: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Remaining Challenges

• Achievement gap among immigrant youth

Page 11: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Remaining Challenges

• Gaps in enrollment and access

Page 12: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Remaining Challenges

• Sociological factors: poverty

Page 13: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Remaining Challenges

• Sociological factors: segregation

Page 14: Still Separate and Unequal? Latina/o and Immigrant Youth and the Quest for Educational Equality Lisa M. Martinez Dept. of Sociology and Criminology University

Beginning of De Facto Segregation

• Segregated neighborhoods, segregated schools

• Reproduction of social inequalities• Access issues for immigrant youth, suppressed

social mobility for Latina/os