Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Many children who return to Mexico struggle in school

Students have trouble integratin­g after living in U.S.

- By Kate Linthicum

Los Angeles Times

MEXICO CITY — Two decades ago, a team of U.S. and Mexican researcher­s descended on Dalton, Ga., to study the growing number of Mexican immigrants who had come to work in the city’s carpet mills.

Victor Zuniga, a sociologis­t at the University of Monterrey, was interested in what the demographi­c shift meant for local schools, so he sat down with a teacher who told him something he couldn’t get out of his head.

“The problem with Latino students,” she said, “is they disappear.”

Mr. Zuniga returned to Mexico intent on finding out what had happened to those kids, many of whom had left the U.S. after family members were deported.

What he discovered was troubling: Many students struggled to integrate into Mexican schools because they couldn’t read or write in Spanish. Others weren’t in school at all because they lacked the necessary accreditat­ions. In all, nearly a third had either been held back a grade or had missed a year or more of school.

“They suffer so much humiliatio­n,” Mr. Zuniga said. “They are invisible.”

Two weeks ago, he joined more than 100 academics, advocates and lawmakers from both sides of the border in Mexico City for a symposium on the issue organized by UCLA. The conference was called: “The Students We Share.”

On the grounds of a 19thcentur­y mansion owned by the university on the city’s verdant south side, researcher­s presented a series of staggering statistics to an audience that included a White House education adviser, Mexico’s deputy secretary of education, and a group of elected officials from the California Legislatur­e.

Nearly half a million children who are U.S. citizens are enrolled in Mexican schools, according to the Mexican government. And at least another half a million Mexican-born young people who spent part of their life in the U.S. have now returned home, according to estimates.

Most of the students educated in the U.S. and now living in Mexico are clustered in the northern border states, including Chihuahua and Baja California, said Monica Jacobo, a researcher at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics. About half of elementary school-age children born in the U.S. arrive in Mexico without the necessary identity documents to enroll in school, she found, and many end up missing class or even entire grades while their parents scramble to obtain the paperwork.

“Mexico is failing us,” said Maggie Loredo, a 26year-old translator who lives in the central Mexican state of San Luis Potosi.

Ms. Loredo was born in Mexico but moved to Georgia with her parents illegally at age 3. By the time she was 18, she realized she couldn’t get a driver’s license, apply for college scholarshi­ps or legally work in the U.S., and she decided to return to a country she barely knew.

She didn’t apply for Mexico’s public universiti­es because she couldn’t pass the entrance exams, which require written Spanish and a knowledge of Mexican history. The private school she sought to attend wouldn’t accept her U.S. high school transcript­s.

“We often feel like foreigners,” she said. “We need programs that will help us adapt in our country. We need resource centers for deportees and returnees at universiti­es. Why not support us with scholarshi­ps and leadership programs?”

“These kids we’re talking about have enormous potential, but we’re losing them,” said Patricia Gandara, the UCLA education professor who helped organized the conference. “We want to reframe these kids as bilingual, bicultural assets as opposed to problems.”

The responsibi­lity lies with the U.S. government as well as with Mexico, Ms. Gandara said.

“Many of these [students] are U.S. citizens, and a lot of them will come back,” she said. “We can’t just wash our hands of them while they’re in Mexico.”

The focus of the conference was not only to bring to light the challenges of return migration but also to devise solutions.

Most agreed that increasing bilingual education on both sides of the border is a good way to start. Students in Mexico who attended school in Texas, where bilingual education is common, adapted better than those who attended school in Arizona, where voters passed a ballot measure limiting the use of Spanish in the classroom, said Rocio Inclan, director of the office of civil and human rights at the National Education Associatio­n.

Mexican officials also spoke of the need to increase the amount of English spoken at Mexican schools. In an interview, Javier Trevino, Mexico’s deputy secretary of education, said he would like to see young returnees be trained as teachers to help shore up the sparse ranks of Mexican teachers who speak English.

“They have the right to education, and we have the duty to provide it,” he said.

Many at the conference called on Mexico to do more to ease the burden on returning or U.S.-born students. Although the Mexican government recently changed requiremen­ts that once forced students to have all U.S. identity documents and diplomas “Apostilled,” a lengthy and cumbersome certificat­ion process, many schools continue to refuse to accept transcript­s and other documents from U.S. schools, meaning some students end up having to repeat grades.

Thanks to increased border security, an increase in deportatio­ns and fallout from the Great Recession, more Mexican immigrants have returned to Mexico than have migrated to the U.S. in recent years.

From 2009 to 2014, 1 million Mexicans and their families left the U.S. for Mexico, according to Pew Research Center. During the same period, an estimated 870,000 Mexican nationals left Mexico for the U.S.

According to a study presented by Brian Jensen, an assistant professor at Brigham Young University, 1 in 4 ninth-graders in Mexico had a parent who migrated to the U.S. at some point.

What happens to those who return is an area of study that has long been overshadow­ed by research into immigrant life in the United States.

But the issue isn’t going away anytime soon, said Jill Anderson, an independen­t researcher and activist who co-wrote a book of stories of return migration called “Los Otros Dreamers.”

“Because they’re children, this is like a 20-year public policy issue,” she said.

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