School Environment and Academic Persistence of Newcomer Students: The Roles of Teachers and Peers
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Date
Authors
Nakhaie, Reza
Ramos, Howard
Fakih, Fatimah
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
University of Windsor
Abstract
This  paper  explores  the  relationship  between  the  social  context  of  schools, measured  in  terms  of  perceptions  of  teacher  support  and students’ openness  to diversity,  and  the  academic  persistence  of  immigrant  and  refugee  newcomer students.  It  investigates  whether  newcomer  adolescents’  academic  persistence varies  by  the  perceived  supportiveness  of  school  environments.  Based  on  data collected from newcomer students in a medium-sized city in Canada, results show that immigrant and refugee youth display higher academic persistence when they perceive  that  their  teachers  support  them  and  when  their  fellow  students  are receptive to diversity. Specifically, newcomer youth’s educational success depends on  a  school  environment  that  encourages  diversity  and  inter-group  relations  and teachers who are supportive of students, encourage them, and believe in them. This study also shows that newcomer youth are more  likely to academically persist in school when they perceive that their fellow schoolmates exhibit cultural humility or openness to diversity and thus are interested in knowing more about immigrants’ country of origin, respect them, and interact with them.
Description
This article came from the following CYRRC-funded project: https://cyrrc.org/2020/09/21/5m/.
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Citation
Nakhaie, R., Ramos, H., & Fakih, F. (2022). School Environment and Academic Persistence of Newcomer Students: The Roles of Teachers and Peers. Journal of Teaching and Learning, 16(1), 64-84.
