Books on the topic 'Newcomer children'

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1

Custodio, Brenda. How to design and implement a newcomer program. Boston: Pearson, 2011.

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2

Friedlander, Monica. The newcomer program: Helping immigrant students succeed in U.S. schools. Washington, DC (1118 22nd Street, NW, Washington 20037): National Clearinghouse for Bilingual Education, 1991.

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3

ERIC Clearinghouse on Languages and Linguistics., ed. Secondary newcomer programs: Helping recent immigrants prepare for school success. [Washington, DC]: ERIC Clearinghouse on Languages and Linguistics, Center for Applied Linguistics, 1998.

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4

Hanning, Denise. One child, two cultures: A manual for facilitating the integration of newcomer children in educational settings. Winnipeg: Manitoba Dept. of Employment Services and Economic Security, Immigration and Settlement Branch, 1987.

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5

Chang, Hedy Nai-Lin. Newcomer programs: Innovative efforts to meet the educational challenges of immigrant students. San Francisco, CA: California Tomorrow Immigrant Students Project, 1990.

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6

L, Hafner Anne, ed. Hosting newcomers: Structuring educational opportunities for immigrant children. New York: Teachers College Press, 1997.

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7

Anderson, W. W. The new newcomers: Patterns of adjustment of West Indian immigrant children in Metropolitan Toronto schools. Toronto: Canadian Scholars' Press, 1987.

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8

Beahm, George W. Passport to Narnia: A newcomer's guide. Charlottesville, VA: Hampton Roads Pub. Co., 2005.

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9

McDonnell, Lorraine. Newcomers in American schools: Meeting the educational needs of immigrant youths. Santa Monica, CA: Rand, 1993.

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10

J, Walker T. Colorado: A newcomer's manual : everything you need to know about living in Colorado. Denver: Millennium Publications, 1995.

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11

Adult Children of Alcoholics Newcomer Booklet. ACA WSO INC., 2017.

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12

Newcomer Good News Bible. London: HarperCollins, 2000.

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13

Cudak, Karin. Bildung Für Newcomer: Wie Schule und Quartier Mit Einwanderung Aus Südosteuropa Umgehen. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, 2016.

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14

Xu, Shijing. In search of home on landscapes in transition: Narratives of newcomer families' cross-cultural schooling experience. 2006.

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15

Orme, David, and Helen Orme. Newcomer. Ransom Publishing Limited, 2014.

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16

The Newcomer. Ransom Publishing, 2014.

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17

Holmes, Robyn M., and Jaipaul L. Roopnarine, eds. Culture, Schooling, and Children's Learning Experiences. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/9780191982651.001.0001.

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Abstract The contributions in this volume address the need to expand the discourse on the relationship between culture, schooling, and children’s learning experiences and each chapter provides a unique piece that broadens the understanding of these connections. Several themes emerge: parental beliefs and cultural models shape children’s schooling and learning experiences and social interactions with peers and teachers; quality early childhood education, play-based approaches, and playful learning are important to children’s school success and development; cultural variables intersect with other forces such as historical events, oppression, socioeconomic status, and political ideologies in complex ways to shape children’s learning experiences; and schools are contexts for academic and cultural learning. Together the chapters weave a story that views learning as an activity that takes place within cultural contexts and highlights the macro and micro forces that shape children’s everyday learning experiences. The chapters in this volume acknowledge and situate children’s learning experiences within the historical events, economic conditions, political ideologies, parental belief systems, cultural models, and national policy initiatives that influence children’s schooling and learning experiences. Some of these works honor the experiences of Indigenous, newcomer, and first-generation children and children of underrepresented communities. The vital role that policymakers, teacher educators, schools, and classroom educators play in these endeavors emerges throughout the volume.
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18

Newcomers to the U.S.: Children and Families. Haworth Press, 1991.

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19

Hamann, Edmund T., and Jenelle Reeves. Humanizing Latino Newcomers in the “No Coast” Region. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037665.003.0009.

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In December 2006 and again in May 2008, the Midwest was the setting for large-scale Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids in rural meatpacking towns that drew national attention. In the first raids, concurrent sweeps in six different communities that hosted Swift plants, children, and schools emerged as important and sympathy-generating themes as children were separated from detained parents and schools were left struggling to figure out what to do with those children. Both of these issues distracted from the intended law enforcement thrust of the raids, reducing their popularity and making them more controversial. In contrast, the May 2008 raid at a kosher meat-processing facility in Postville, Iowa, had the ICE enforcement agents querying their detainees about whether they had children and placing those who answered yes under house arrest. Although this, too, destroyed the former workers' chance at earning a livelihood, it did not separate mothers from children, nor did it require schools to become emergency sanctuaries for frightened and marooned children. Thus, two key sympathy-generating factors that could make the larger public dubious of ICE enforcement were bypassed. Invoking trope theory, this chapter looks at local and regional mainstream print media coverage of both raids to see how the imagining of children, school, transnationality, and workers in and by Middle America was changed between the two raid cycles, in turn changing the semiotics of how these raids were to be responded to.
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20

Davenport, Eddie. Bunnyburg: The Newcomers. Outskirts Press, Incorporated, 2013.

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21

Monti and Leo: A Newcomer in Pocketville. Walker Books, Limited, 2024.

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22

Monti and Leo: A Newcomer in Pocketville. Candlewick Press, 2024.

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23

Peck, Penny. Crash Course in Children’s Services. 2nd ed. ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400632877.

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Useful for newcomers to the children's library staff as well as longtime children's librarians, the second edition of this popular handbook provides easy-to-follow instructions to make innovations in children's library materials work for you. Addressing everything from the basics of reference to the complex and highly specialized duties of program development, this handbook is perfect for both librarians and support staff who are assigned to the children's department of a library. This second addition of Crash Course in Children's Services covers many of the new issues facing children's library staff, including eBooks, using apps in programming, other online reading options, book trailers, nonfiction and the Common Core curriculum. It also describes expanded programming options such as makerspaces, gaming, dog reading programs, and play at storytime. Ideal for new children's librarians as well as experienced library staff who have not worked with children recently and long-time children's librarians looking to add new skills to their tool kits, the book familiarizes readers with all the new developments of the past few years, from online reading options to the wealth of new programming aimed at youth. You'll learn about subjects such as pop-up and passive programming, offering online homework help, and outreach and services to special needs children, and then quickly implement new practices into use at your library.
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24

Anderson, W. W., and Rudolph W. Grant. The New Newcomers : Patterns of Adjustment of West Indian Immigrant Children in Metropolitan Toronto Schools. Canadian Scholars Press, 1998.

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25

Phillips, Brian, Shelly Culbertson, Julia H. Kaufman, and Jenna W. Kramer. Educating Newcomers: K-12 Public Schooling for Undocumented and Asylum-Seeking Children in the United States. RAND Corporation, The, 2000.

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26

Educating Newcomers: K–12 Public Schooling for Undocumented and Asylum-Seeking Children in the United States. RAND Corporation, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7249/rra1326-1.

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27

Johnson-Weiner, Karen. St. Lawrence County’s Swartzentruber Amish. Cornell University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501707605.003.0003.

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This chapter explores how the Swartzentruber Amish families who began to arrive in New York State in 1974 came because there was affordable land available. Although the availability of cheap farmland was a key factor in their decision to move to New York, many Swartzentruber families, like the Troyer families who moved to the Conewango Valley, were also motivated by the desire to raise their children in a homogeneous community, away from the influence of different, often more progressive Amish groups. The move allowed the Swartzentruber Amish newcomers to distance themselves from the larger Ohio Old Order community and a history of conflict and schism. With large families, the Swartzentruber Amish are among the fastest-growing groups in North America, and the new settlement expanded quickly.
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28

Educating Newcomers: A Research-Practice Conversation About K–12 Public Schooling for Undocumented and Asylum-Seeking Children in the United States. RAND Corporation, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.7249/pta1326-1.

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29

Haines, David W., and Karen Rosenblum. Illegal Immigration in America. Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400668326.

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Few issues have provoked as much controversy over the last decade as illegal immigration. While some argue for the need to seal America's borders and withdraw all forms of social and governmental support for illegal migrants and their children, others argue for humanitarian treatment—including legalization—for people who fill widely acknowledged needs in American industry and agriculture and have left home-country situations of economic hardship or political persecution. The study of illegal immigration necessarily confronts a broad range of migrants—from the familiar border crossers to those who enter illegally and overstay their visas, to the many unrecognized refugees who enter the country to seek protection under U.S. asylum law. The subject also demands attention to American society's responses to these newcomers—responses that often focus on limited elements of a complex issue. A comprehensive, up-to-date review of this volatile subject, this book provides an accessible, balanced introduction to the subject. Covering the full range of illegal immigrants from Mexican border crossers to Central American refugees, illegal Europeans, and smuggled Chinese, the book considers the kind of work the migrants do and the public response to them. The work is divided into four parts: Concepts, Policies, and Numbers; The Migrants and Their Work; The Responses; and Illegal Immigration in Perspective.
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30

Newcomb, John Bearse. Genealogical Memoir of the Newcomb Family, Containing Records of Nearly Every Person of the Name in America from 1635-1874. Also the First Generation of Children Descended from Females Who Have Lost the Name Newcomb by Marriage. with Notices of the Family. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2018.

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31

Genealogical Memoir of the Newcomb Family: Containing Records of Nearly Every Person of the Name in America from 1635-1874. Also the First Generation of Children Descended from Females Who Have Lost the Name Newcomb by Marriage. with Notices of the Family. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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32

Genealogical Memoir of the Newcomb Family: Containing Records of Nearly Every Person of the Name in America from 1635-1874. Also the First Generation of Children Descended from Females Who Have Lost the Name Newcomb by Marriage. with Notices of the Family. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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33

Baobaid, Mohammed, Lynda Ashbourne, Abdallah Badahdah, and Abir Al Jamal. Home / Publications / Pre and Post Migration Stressors and Marital Relations among Arab Refugee Families in Canada Pre and Post Migration Stressors and Marital Relations among Arab Refugee Families in Canada. 2nd ed. Hamad Bin Khalifa University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/difi_9789927137983.

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The study is funded by Doha International Family Institute (DIFI), a member of Qatar Foundation, and is a collaboration between the Muslim Resource Centre for Social Support and Integration of London, Ontario; University of Guelph, Ontario; and University of Calgary, Alberta, all located in Canada; and the Doha International Family Institute, Qatar. The study received research ethics approval from the University of Guelph and the University of Calgary. This study aims to assess the impact of pre- and post-migration on marital relationships and family dynamics for Arab refugee families resettled in Canada. The study also examines the role of professional service providers in supporting these Arab refugee families. The unique experiences of Arab families displaced from their countries due to war and political conflict, and the various hardships experienced during their stay in transit countries, impact their family relations and interactions within the nuclear family context and their interconnectedness with their extended families. Furthermore, these families encounter various challenges within their resettlement process that interrupt their integration. Understanding the impact of traumatic experiences within the pre-migration journey as well as the impact of post-migration stressors on recently settled Arab refugee families in Canada provides insight into the shift in spousal and family relationships. Refugee research studies that focus on the impact of pre-migration trauma and displacement, the migration journey, and post-migration settlement on family relationships are scarce. Since the majority of global refugees in recent years come from Arab regions, mainly Syria, as a result of armed conflicts, this study is focused on the unique experiences of Arab refugee families fleeing conflict zones. The Canadian role in recently resettling a large influx of Arab refugees and assisting them to successfully integrate has not been without challenges. Traumatic pre-migration experiences as a result of being subjected to and/or witnessing violence, separation from and loss of family members, and loss of property and social status coupled with experiences of hardships in transit countries have a profound impact on families and their integration. Refugees are subjected to individual and collective traumatic experiences associated with cultural or ethnic disconnection, mental health struggles, and discrimination and racism. These experiences have been shown to impact family interactions. Arab refugee families have different definitions of “family” and “home” from Eurocentric conceptualizations which are grounded in individualistic worldviews. The discrepancy between collectivism and individualism is mainly recognized by collectivist newcomers as challenges in the areas of gender norms, expectations regarding parenting and the physical discipline of children, and diverse aspects of the family’s daily life. For this study, we interviewed 30 adults, all Arab refugees (14 Syrian and 16 Iraqi – 17 males, 13 females) residing in London, Ontario, Canada for a period of time ranging from six months to seven years. The study participants were married couples with and without children. During the semi-structured interviews, the participants were asked to reflect on their family life during pre-migration – in the country of origin before and during the war and in the transit country – and post-migration in Canada. The inter - views were conducted in Arabic, audio-recorded, and transcribed. We also conducted one focus group with seven service providers from diverse sectors in London, Ontario who work with Arab refugee families. The study used the underlying principles of constructivist grounded theory methodology to guide interviewing and a thematic analysis was performed. MAXQDA software was used to facilitate coding and the identification of key themes within the transcribed interviews. We also conducted a thematic analysis of the focus group transcription. The thematic analysis of the individual interviews identified four key themes: • Gender role changes influence spousal relationships; • Traumatic experiences bring suffering and resilience to family well-being; • Levels of marital conflict are higher following post-migration settlement; • Post-migration experiences challenge family values. The outcome of the thematic analysis of the service provider focus group identified three key themes: • The complex needs of newly arrived Arab refugee families; • Gaps in the services available to Arab refugee families; • Key aspects of training for cultural competencies. The key themes from the individual interviews demonstrate: (i) the dramatic sociocul - tural changes associated with migration that particularly emphasize different gender norms; (ii) the impact of trauma and the refugee experience itself on family relation - ships and personal well-being; (iii) the unique and complex aspects of the family journey; and (iv) how valued aspects of cultural and religious values and traditions are linked in complex ways for these Arab refugee families. These outcomes are consist - ent with previous studies. The study finds that women were strongly involved in supporting their spouses in every aspect of family life and tried to maintain their spouses’ tolerance towards stressors. The struggles of husbands to fulfill their roles as the providers and protec - tors throughout the migratory journey were evident. Some parents experienced role shifts that they understood to be due to the unstable conditions in which they were living but these changes were considered to be temporary. Despite the diversity of refugee family experiences, they shared some commonalities in how they experi - enced changes that were frightening for families, as well as some that enhanced safety and stability. These latter changes related to safety were welcomed by these fami - lies. Some of these families reported that they sought professional help, while others dealt with changes by becoming more distant in their marital relationship. The risk of violence increased as the result of trauma, integration stressors, and escalation in marital issues. These outcomes illustrate the importance of taking into consideration the complexity of the integration process in light of post-trauma and post-migration changes and the timespan each family needs to adjust and integrate. Moreover, these families expressed hope for a better future for their children and stated that they were willing to accept change for the sake of their children as well. At the same time, these parents voiced the significance of preserving their cultural and religious values and beliefs. The service providers identified gaps in service provision to refugee families in some key areas. These included the unpreparedness of professionals and insufficiency of the resources available for newcomer families from all levels of government. This was particularly relevant in the context of meeting the needs of the large influx of Syrian refugees who were resettled in Canada within the period of November 2015 to January 2017. Furthermore, language skills and addressing trauma needs were found to require more than one year to address. The service providers identified that a longer time span of government assistance for these families was necessary. In terms of training, the service providers pinpointed the value of learning more about culturally appropriate interventions and receiving professional development to enhance their work with refugee families. In light of these findings, we recommend an increased use of culturally integrative interventions and programs to provide both formal and informal support for families within their communities. Furthermore, future research that examines the impact of culturally-based training, cultural brokers, and various culturally integrative practices will contribute to understanding best practices. These findings with regard to refugee family relationships and experiences are exploratory in their nature and support future research that extends understanding in the area of spousal relationships, inter - generational stressors during adolescence, and parenting/gender role changes.
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