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10.4324 9780203046265 Previewpdf
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Adaptive Strategies of
Asian Americans in California
DEDICATION
This book belongs first and foremost to the new Asian Americans
of California whose lives are studied herein.
Myth or Reality:
Adaptive Strategies of Asian
Americans in California
Henry T. Trueba
Lilly Cheng
Kenji Ima
~ ~~o~~~;n~~~up
LONDON AND NEW YORK
© H.T. Trueba, L. Cheng and K. Ima 1993
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Publisher's Note
The publisher has gone to great lengths to ensure the quality of this
reprint but points out that some imperfections in the original may
be apparent
Acknowledgments
The authors are deeply grateful to the Asian American communities, espe-
cially those in Southern California, who shared with us their life accounts
and their aspirations for a better life, one in which there is freedom, eco-
nomic security, peace, quality education and the opportunity to excel. As
immigrants, we ourselves share with these communities the democratic ideals
that brought us to America.
Many scholars and writers have influenced our intellectual development
and guided us in our efforts to make sense of our experiences as immigrants
and as members of ethnic minority groups in the United States. We want to
thank all our professors and mentors. A special debt of gratitude is owed to
anthropologists, sociologists and psychologists whose work is cited here.
Their insights and theoretical contributions made this book possible. Indeed
much of the conceptual infrastructure presented here was inspired by the
work of scholars such as George and Louise Spindler, George DeVos, Fred
Erickson, John Ogbu, and Marcelo Suarez-Orozco; as well as by unique
contributions of Lev Semenovich Vygotsky and his followers. We are also
thankful to Huynh Dinh Te, Edmund Lee, Ruben Rumbaut, Jean Nidorf and
Rosita Galang, and others who offered valuable comments and suggestions
to improve this manuscript at its various stages of development.
The production of this volume required the assistance of many persons
to whom we express our sincere gratitude. We have a special debt of grati-
tude to Joy Pace who devoted many hours to reading and editing the manu-
script, as well as to Paul Borowsky who was highly instrumental in the
reorganization and last revisions of the manuscript. We are also grateful
to Kathleen Akong, Patrice Koffman, Julie Chase and Jill Reed for their
support services.
In the last few years of work with Falmer Press we have found in Carol
Saumarez an intelligent, competent and extremely knowledgeable editor
who provides systematic, consistent and most valuable advice. We have
indeed a special debt of gratitude to Carol; without her clear and forceful
direction this manuscript either would have never seen the light or would
v
Acknowledgments
have been of lower quality. It has been a genuine privilege working with such
a wonderful teacher, who with enormous patience and tact made our tasks
most pleasurable and instructive.
Last but not least, we want to thank our families for tolerating our
absences, our late hours at work, and even our lack of sensitivity to their
needs for our time and presence. Their moral support and assistance are
deeply appreciated. We want to thank our spouses, Ardeth, Koun-Ping and
Leslie. This book is as much theirs as it is ours.
vi
Contents
Dedication ii
Acknowledgments v
Contents vii
Tables and Maps x
Preface xi
Chapter 1. Theoretical Perspectives: America's Most Recent
Immigrants 1
Adjustment to Mainstream Culture 1
Pioneers in Educational Anthropology 3
Castelike Minorities in Schools 6
Intelligence and Acculturation 14
School as a Mirror of Society 16
Reflections on Theory and Practice 17
Chapter 2. Asian Diversity and the Challenges Faced by
Newcomers 19
Pacific Islanders 19
The Samoans
The Hawaiians
The Chamorros
Southeast and East Asians 25
The Hmong
The Khmer and Lao
The Vietnamese
The Filipinos
The Japanese Americans
The Koreans
The Chinese from Taiwan
The Chinese from Hong Kong and Mainland
vii
Contents
viii
Contents
ix
Tables and Maps
Tables
Maps
x
Preface
xi
Preface
chapter concludes: 'the theoretical argument here is that historical and ethno-
graphic research helps teachers to build a comprehensive and rich picture of
the culture of minority children.'
Chapter Two compiles demographic data and background profiles of
each major Asian Pacific Islander group in California, demonstrating the
complexity and diversity within and between the various nationalities who
comprise the country's fastest-growing minority. Though focused on Cali-
fornia where nearly 30 per cent of the country's Asian Pacific Islanders
reside, the profiles in Chapter Two, as well as the case studies, recommenda-
tions and theoretical perspectives in later chapters are relevant to researchers
and practitioners nationally.
Chapters Three, Four and Five examine critical educational issues in
relation to the ethno-historical and socio-cultural contexts of Asian Pacific
Islanders. Each chapter integrates theoretical perspectives with illustrative
case studies, and provides rich descriptions of issues ranging from academic
achievement and language proficiency to cultural conflict and adaptation in-
volving the home, school, and community and concerns about the unrecog-
nized needs of Asian Pacific Islander at-risk youth. Chapter Six outlines
thoughtful and realistic recommendations with which teachers and parents
can strengthen the overall participation of Asian Pacific Islander students in
their educational process.
Finally, Chapter Seven returns to some of the theoretical perspectives
introduced in Chapter One, showing how the case of Asian Pacific Islanders
illuminates the importance of ethnohistorical and ethnographic approaches.
Drawing from neo-Vygotskian theories of socially-based cognitive develop-
ment, Freire's concept of conscientization and the Spindlers' practice of
cultural therapy, the authors argue for an ethnography of empowerment
which enables teachers, students, parents and communities to develop indi-
vidually and collectively to achieve their full potential. It is a powerful vision
rooted in the practice of what works.
The authors challenge us to move beyond the stereotypic notions of
Asian American academic success by recognizing, first of all, that the diverse
Asian Pacific Islander communities include large numbers of at-risk students,
and secondly, that even with academic achievement, if there is not compar-
able social development, then the promise of equality remains unfulfilled.
They argue persuasively that we need to crack the glass ceiling and trans-
form both the myth and the reality.
This original collaboration between Professors Trueba, Cheng and Ima
will be one of our most valuable guides into the 21st Century. For their
shared commitment and contribution to educational equity as well as for
their generous invitation to write this Preface, I am deeply grateful.
xii
Chapter 1
Theoretical Perspectives:
America's most Recent Immigrants
The recent arrival of Asian immigrants and the emergence of their adaptive
strategies in the 1990s is a phenomenon without precedent. The sheer
number of Asian newcomers, their cultural similarities and differences, the
paths for adjustment and the coping mechanisms chosen as a means to
resolve cultural conflicts are most instructive; but also their socioeconomic
mobility, their educational attainment, and most of all, the folk stereotypic
explanations of their success are characteristics which distinguish Asian
immigrants in the last two decades of this century and mark important trends
for the twenty-first century. The circumstances of these historical phenomena
are intriguing and their theoretical implications are significant.
Scholars in the social sciences have been debating since the 1920s, and more
passionately since the 1970s, the reasons why some refugee, immigrant and
minority families successfully adapt to the American mainstream way of life,
and move upwardly in our society, while other families choose adaptive
strategies that slow their integration into mainstream society. George and
Louise Spindler have argued (Spindler and Spindler, 1971, 1990) that the
adaptive strategies exemplified by the Menominee Indians, who are variably
acculturated into the American mainstream are often found in other groups
in our society. These stages shown in response to cultural conflict are the
following:
1
Myth or Reality
While in their earlier writings (1971) the Spindlers viewed some of these
stages or adaptive strategies as intermediate and temporary linkages in
the acculturation chain, more recently they have regarded these adaptive
strategies as reflecting quasi-permanent responses to conflict on the part of
some individuals. That does not preclude, however, that some individuals
fluctuate from one stage to another, or that some move progressively to full
acculturation (personal communication, November 1, 1990). The choice of
adaptation strategies is contingent upon the cultural background of the
individuals, the opportunity they have to interact with members of main-
stream culture, and their ability to function in that culture.
What is common to all individuals attempting to resolve cultural con-
flicts, regardless of their choice of adaptive strategies, is that all of them
experience cultural discontinuities (Spindler, G., 1968 and 1974). However,
not all discontinuities are destructive. What are the individual or collective
cultural factors in the home culture that determine the response of an in-
dividual to these discontinuities? Research conducted among Mexican
American, Asian American (especially Indochinese populations) and others
suggests that the responses to cultural conflict within the same mainstream
culture are better understood in the historical, sociological and political
contexts of the immigrant communities. (Trueba, 1988a, 1989, 1990; Trueba,
Spindler and Spindler, 1989; Suarez-Orozco, 1989; Trueba, Jacobs and
Kirton, 1990; Delgado-Gaitan and Trueba, 1991; and many others).
The present volume, which is a clear example of the diversity of adaptive
strategies selected by Asian and Pacific Island immigrants from various
linguistic and cultural groups, goes into the linguistic, anthropological, socio-
logical and political contexts of many Asians. By implication, the data pre-
sented here argues for the need to better understand intragroup differences
2
Theoretical Perspectives
After World War II, the field of educational anthropology was founded
by George Spindler and other scholars. The publication by Spindler of
Education and Anthropology in 1955 (Stanford University Press) collected
3
Myth or Reality
some of the most powerful statements from Dorothy Lee, Margaret Mead,
Jules Henry, Solon Kimball, Bernard Siegel, Alfred Kroeber, and George
Spindler. Their insights and commitment to pursue educational anthropology
raised the enthusiasm for a new field that is now one of the strongest in the
American Anthropological Association and has remarkable consistency in
ideology and methodological pursuits. Dorothy Lee at the Carmel Confer-
ence of which Education and Anthropology is a faithful report, states:
4
Theoretical Perspectives
5
Myth or Reality
6
Theoretical Perspectives
Ogbu, along the lines pointed out by Mead, Spindler and others,
conducted a cross-cultural comparative analysis on the basis of existing
studies of differential performance of minority students (summarized in his
article of 1987:315-16). The crucial question Ogbu was asking himself was:
Why are some minorities successful in school even though they face
barriers in culture, language, and postschool opportunities faced by
the minorities that are not successful? It is one thing to conduct
research to discover cultural solutions or other remedies for the
school failure of some minorities; it is quite another thing to conduct
research in order to account for the variability in the school
performance (Ogbu 1987:316-17).
According to Ogbu, the main problem in the academic performance of
minority children 'does not lie in the mere fact that children possess a differ-
ent language,' or a unique learning style or communicative or interactional
patterns; 'it is not even that the children face barriers in future adult oppor-
tunity structure' (1987:317). The explanation of differential performance is in
the 'variability in school adjustment and performance'. Given the societal
forces and conflicts faced by minorities, different groups respond in different
ways. To continue his explanation, Ogbu distinguishes minorities in three
different groups: autonomous, immigrant (or voluntary), and castelike (or
involuntary) minorities. Although autonomous minorities may suffer pre-
judicial treatment, 'they are not socially, economically, and politically sub-
ordinated' nor do they 'experience disproportionate and persistent problems
in learning to read and to compute,' due in part to their home culture that
'demonstrates and encourages school success' (Ogbu, 1987:320). Immigrant
minorities, like the autonomous, voluntarily come to the United States in
search of 'greater economic well-being, better opportunities, and/or greater
political freedom'. They face problems due to language and cultural barriers,
but 'they do not experience disproportionate school failure' (Ogbu, 1987:
321). Finally, the castel ike (or involuntary) minorities are 'people who were
originally brought into United States society involuntarily through slavery,
conquest, or colonization. Thereafter, these minorities were relegated to
menial positions and denied true assimilation into mainstream society'
(Ogbu, 1987:321).
The examples used by Ogbu are native Americans, black Americans,
native Hawaiians, Mexicans, and others. 'It is castelike or involuntary minor-
ities that usually experience more difficulties with social adjustment and
school performance' (Ogbu, 1987:321). More recently, Ogbu has modified his
typology (1989:181-204); he has dropped the use of castelike and simplified
all three types of minorities into two: voluntary and involuntary. He has
retained fundamentally the same essential characteristics of the groups:
immigrants come voluntarily, in search of freedom and economic oppor-
tunities; in contrast, involuntary minorities are brought as a result of slavery,
conquest or colonization. Then he adds:
7
Myth or Reality
8
Theoretical Perspectives
and meanings as appropriate for them because these are not charac-
teristic of white Americans...Cultural inversion usually results in
the coexistence of two opposing cultural frames of reference or ideal
ways of orienting behavior, one considered by the minorities as
appropriate for themselves and the other as appropriate for white
Americans (Ogbu, 1987:323).
9
Myth or Reality
10
Theoretical Perspectives
(associated with social abuse and alienation), there are also clear differences.
Oscar Lewis compared behaviors of poor people in various parts of the
world and somewhat stereotyped the poor as being unable to participate
effectively in social institutions, and as being psychologically handicapped
beyond repair. Lewis did not point out the social structural elements affect-
ing the behavior of the poor, while Ogbu clearly pointed to the job oppor-
tunity structure associated with upward mobility of blacks, or lack of such
mobility regardless of educational level achieved. Lewis did not develop a
sophisticated theory of cultural involution or the development of an oppo-
sitional social identity to explain collective rejection of mainstream values as
Ogbudid.
Ultimately, Ogbu has successfully built a very strong theoretical appar-
atus, and a clean-cut typology of minorities. Ogbu's contributions to sensitize
scholars to the psychodynamics of academic achievement and the problems
faced by certain minority groups are indeed admirable and unmatched
during the last three decades. There is a need, however, for reform and
further clarification in both the application of his typology and the concep-
tual clarity of his definitions. In order to clarify definitions it will be essential
to discuss intragroup individual differences in such a way that the attribution
of psychological characteristics of a group will render each individual unable
to make his/her own decisions. Indeed, oversimplification in the researcher's
interpretation of psychosocial factors affecting decisions must be more
flexible and allow for empirical verification of theories.
The work of the Spindlers, deeply rooted in systematic ethnographic
fieldwork, shows that the origin of intragroup differences is precisely the rich
and multiple strategies for adaptation taken by individuals sharing the same
culture and same social pressures from mainstream cultural institutions. A
large body of psychological literature has also emphasized the importance of
early socialization at home, in school, on the street, everywhere. Schools play
an important, and often decisive, role, but children come to schools with
differential academic preparation and commitment to achievement. Further-
more, the school environment often persuades certain children that they do
not belong there. The 'hidden curriculum' literature in sociology and anthro-
pology, some of which is alluded to in this volume, can shed some light on
the discussion of differential early socialization patterns in school affecting
children's motivation to achieve.
If we are going to take seriously the literature on empowerment that has
made a significant impact in teacher education, curriculum reform, and in the
definition of research priorities and examination of equity issues in a number
of fields (health sciences, education, etc.), we must also examine the ultimate
consequences of explanations based on theories such as the cultural ecological
theory presented by Ogbu. This theory assumes that entire ethnic groups,
or a significant number of members in these groups, behave as castelike.
This means that they are essentially unable to achieve because they define
their culture in opposition to the mainstream culture. Consequently, their
11
Myth or Reality
12
Theoretical Perspectives
13
Myth or Reality
14
Theoretical Perspectives
15
Myth or Reality
To what extent does the school environment reflect the social environment?
How do the school and social environments affect the acculturation phases
of children, their ability to integrate the values of the host culture with their
home values? Finally, to what extent is the successful adjustment and ac-
culturation of minority children a precondition for successful schooling? In
other words, how do we account for the differential performance of minority
students in school? This is the central question raised by the work of recent
scholars (DeVos, 1973, 1980; DeVos and Wagatsuma, 1966; Spindler and
Spindler, 1987a, 1987b, 1987c; Ogbu, 1974, 1978, 1987, 1989; McDermott,
1987a; Trueba, 1983). I believe that an answer must be grounded in deep
historical knowledge of the process of acculturation and adjustment of
minority groups to specific settings.
While oral proficiency in English seems to persuade teachers that these
language minority children are making normal progress in school, the
opposite, children's inability to rapidly acquire English literacy skills, may
lead to the classification (or misclassification) of children as learning disabled
and ultimately may result in the dropout phenomena (Rueda, 1987). Studies
have consistently shown that linguistic minority children's learning problems
are manifested in three forms: 1) Lack of overall participation in whole class
activities, 2) lack of academic productivity in school and at home, and 3) the
presence of vague and pervasive stress, fear, confusion and other signs of
ongoing emotional turmoil. Consequently, we must face two important
issues: the role of language in instruction (first- and/or second-language vis-a-
vis the purpose and nature of instruction), and the role of language and
culture in the acquisition of English literacy skills:
16
Theoretical Perspectives
17
Myth or Reality
and children need to learn a great deal more about each other, to understand
each other's actual home cultural background and previous experiences, and
to engage in cooperative activities which guarantee academic success.
People need extra time and flexibility to place themselves in a new
cultural environment in which behavior can have different interpretations
and the experiences faced by them daily in the home, school and community
have different meanings and values. The value of ethnohistorical research
consists precisely in offering an inside view of the process of acculturation to
a new cultural environment, an interpretation of new linguistic and cultural
codes, and integration of codes.
Children and their teachers may come to realize that their own intra-
psychological processes are linked to their home interpretations of events and
behaviors not shared with other persons in school. Thus, in order to help
children make the transition, reduce stress to tolerable levels, and participate
actively in school learning activities, teachers themselves need a guarantee of
academic success. Because children's adjustment to school is often impacted
profoundly by the pre-arrival experiences they face, the loss and separation
from relatives, the feeling of guilt associated with this loss and separation,
as well as the many degrading and traumatic incidents (DeVos, 1984) experi-
enced by many refugees and low-status immigrants, teachers should not
blame themselves for the slow progress shown by some children. Pleasant
school encounters may easily lead to the healing and may result in feelings of
self-worth, personal safety, and happiness so that children are enabled to
learn effectively.
Teachers must maintain a great deal of faith in children's potential and
a positive outlook on their incremental accomplishments. But in order to do
this, teachers need an appreciation of the historical role played by children's
ethnic community. To permit teachers to acquire and use a rich historical
perspective and cultural appreciation of their students' families, they should
be given a great deal more latitude in parcelling the curriculum tasks over
a period of time, and in searching for strategies to maximize community
participation and children's engagement in meaningful learning activities
(meaningful from the perspective of the ethnic community). The theoretical
argument here is that historical and ethnographic research helps teachers
build a comprehensive and rich picture of the culture of minority children.
Consequently, both are complementary tools in the hands of teachers seek-
ing to become effective instructors in culturally diverse schools. The mean-
ingful participation of minority students in the learning process requires that
teachers understand children's home culture and use it in the organization of
instruction.
18
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