Happy to come across this story in Forbes that imparts an important, if inconvenient truth to some, about immigrant achievement in the U.S. My guess is that those most in opposition are themselves the progeny of immigrants. In any case, here's what author Stuart Anderson says in this regard:
The evidence indicates that the children of immigrants are increasing their influence on science in America. Sixty percent (24 of 40) of the finalists of the 2004 Intel Science Talent Search had at least one immigrant parent. In 2011, that proportion rose to 70% (28 of 40) who had at least one immigrant. And in 2016, the number rose again to 83% (33 of 40) of the finalists of the Intel Science Talent Search who had at least one immigrant parent.
Eye-popping, right? (Continue to Anderson piece below.)
Although the story of immigrant achievement is more complex than I can possibly do justice to in this brief commentary (for more, read my book Subtractive Schooling), research on immigrant achievement has consistently shown higher levels of achievement among our immigrant population relative to our U.S.-born youth. As already suggested, there are caveats...
Despite these, research by my former student, Laurie Pierce, working with former Texas State Rep. Rick Noriega in 2000 showed
that a very high percentage—I want to say at least 45 percent—of
high school valedictorians that year in the Houston Independent School District (HISD) were immigrant
youth. For Texas legislators in that era with Rick Perry as governor, it seemed wasteful not to give these youth a chance by waiving their out-of-state tuition dollars. After all, they had contributed positively to K12 education and it wasn't their fault that they found themselves in the U.S. Many of them didn't even know they were undocumented until they made that sad discovery in high school that having to pay out-of-state tuition as a "foreigner" was their only option if they had hopes of going to college. And many of them did.
Plus, these young people were already living in the U.S. for an extended time period and it seemed the right thing to do. Here are the qualifications:
Plus, these young people were already living in the U.S. for an extended time period and it seemed the right thing to do. Here are the qualifications:
To qualify in Texas, students must live in the state at least three years continuously before graduating from high school or receiving the equivalent of a diploma. Students who are not citizens or permanent residents of the United States must declare an intention to seek legal resident status as soon as they are eligible.
Years of advocacy by MALDEF, LULAC, and other groups together with research that Laurie and I did contributed to the development and passage in 2001 of HB1403, Texas' in-state tuition bill, sometimes referred to as the "Texas Dream Act."
Texas, was the first state to
pass this and was followed that same year in 2001 by California's AB 540, with other states adoting it as law, as well. Today, most folks recognize this as the federal DREAM Act.
At the moment, there is a bill in the Texas House, HB 393, authored by a Texas legislator named Strickland to repeal the 2001 law but thankfully, House Speaker Joe Straus isn't hearing it as he deems the policy to be “perfectly acceptable,” according to the San Antonio Express-News.
Not only is it "perfectly acceptable," but is in fact demonstrably important to our future as a society and economy as this piece indicates, as well as more recent research in 2015 by Ann Beeson of the Center for Public Policy Priorities. Not only are immigrants poised to thrive with good policies like HB 1403 and the DREAM Act, but our state and nation, too.
Angela Valenzuela
c/s
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