how young first-generation Americans understand their origins and upbringings
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What is something unseen that makes you who you are?
The Split Existence
Growing up between cultures creates a split existence for young first-generation Americans that impacts their formative years (and possibly lifetime).
From their earliest years, first-generation Americans are asked to think about their origins. Understanding the sacrifices their families have made comes with the pressure to return the investment — to fulfil the promise of the American dream.
A connection to the immigrant experience can look like many things, from the journey from a place of origin to the needs of daily life in the US. Having this awareness so early in life has a big influence on ideas of success and how Connectivists move through the world:
Growing up with this level of expectation and responsibility, first-generation Americans Americans describe themselves as more self-sufficient than their counterparts.
The Split Existence
For many young first-generation Americans, school brings these feelings of differences into focus. From the classroom to the playground, this early social setting begins to spell out the contrasts of the culture of their home and the world beyond.
The Split Existence
When asked about these themes, there are many similarities in how first-generation Americans describe their experience
The Split Existence
ThoughtMatter invites you to participate in this research through the following lenses:
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