Wednesday February 22, 2012

Welcome   |   Register   |   Log in

Past Event

A FUTURE OF CHILDREN Event

Immigrant Children Falling Behind: Implications and Policy Prescriptions

Immigration, Children & Families

Event Summary

Nearly a quarter of schoolchildren in the United States are immigrants or the children of immigrants. A substantial percentage of these children, especially those from Latin America, are falling behind in school and as a result, face a bleak economic future.

Event Information

When

Wednesday, April 20, 2011
9:00 AM to 11:00 AM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On April 20, The Future of Children, a joint project of Princeton University and the Brookings Institution, hosted an event to release the latest issue of its journal. The issue is devoted entirely to several aspects of the status and well-being of immigrant children. An accompanying policy brief reviews the problem of low educational attainment among immigrant children and proposes a set of policy recommendations that could improve their attainment, including expanding preschool programs, improved English Language Learner instruction, and congressional passage of the DREAM Act to allow undocumented students to attend college.

The event began with an overview of the journal and the policy brief by the editors, Marta Tienda of Princeton and Ron Haskins of Brookings. Following the overview, a panel of experts presented arguments for and against the DREAM ACT and commented on how the educational achievement of immigrant children can be improved.

After the program, the speakers took questions from the audience.

Transcript

RON HASKINS: We were, at least until the recession, in the midst of the first or second greatest wave of immigration the country’s ever had. For over two decades we averaged a million legal immigrants a year and we, during many of those years, most of those years, we probably had as many as a half a million undocumented immigrants as well. So, we have a tremendous number of immigrants, and then from that it follows that a really shocking percentage of America’s children are either first -- they’re either immigrants themselves or they’re children of immigrants.

So, it’s really -- this is a huge issue for the nation and it’s something that we ought to pay a lot more attention to especially here in Washington, where as far as I can tell, we’ve made approximately zero progress in the last decade on this issue. I’m serious. And it’s really -- I think it’s an indictment of our political system that we cannot come together and -- especially since parts of the solution are, I think -- are or potentially are bipartisan. So, there’s a lot to talk about.

Participants

Introduction

Ron Haskins

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies

Overview

Ron Haskins

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies

Marta Tienda

Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs
Princeton University

Panel

Moderator: Ron Haskins

Senior Fellow, Economic Studies

Josh Bernstein

Director of Immigration
SEIU

Mark Krikorian

Executive Director
Center for Immigration Studies

Jena McNeill

Senior Policy Analyst, Homeland Security
The Heritage Foundation

Audrey Singer

Senior Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program


My Portfolio

My New Content

View suggested content based on items you have saved to your Portfolio.
Log in or register now