Quick Summary
- Cultural and language barriers
- Translation not enough
It can be a challenge for any mother in the United States to ensure her children get the best education and the best health care possible. It can be even more difficult when her English is limited and she feels inadequate for not understanding the system.
A new policy brief released by the Center for Poverty Research at the University of California, Davis, describes the informal as well as language barriers that Mexican immigrant mothers face in schools and health care settings. It also shows that mothers can partner with professionals who recognize how much they care for and understand their children.
Much of the relevant cultural capital in these settings is closely linked to material resources or education, so its not just a matter of telling immigrant mothers that they must arrive on time, or speak up when they have questions, said Ming-Cheng Lo, a professor of sociology at 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis and author of the study.
Immigrants may lack cultural capital
Many of the challenges these mothers face, Lo found, has to do with lacking the kind of cultural capital that most Americans gain after years of socialization in a middle-class lifestyle and education. Cultural capital is a form of informal knowledge that makes it easier to navigate social service institutions. It can include knowledge about how a system works, where to get help or how to conduct oneself in a style that staff and professionals consider knowledgeable and worthy of respect.
For many mothers, Lo found in her study, even help from someone who speaks Spanish may not be enough. One study participant said, I dont want to say anything, because Im afraid that what I might say wouldnt come out right. I dont know how to express myself in these situations even when they speak Spanish.
When we see things in terms of individual decisions or efforts, it can be difficult to realize that not all individuals are equally equipped with the cultural and other resources to be making these decisions or efforts, said Lo.
While these mothers lacked cultural capital, they were able to leverage their capital as mothers to advocate on behalf of their children. As mothers, they cared deeply for their children and understood them well. Lo found that mothers were most successful when they could use these qualities as the basis for partnership and understanding with professionals at their childrens schools and hospitals.
Lo interviewed 25 Mexican immigrant mothers with limited English-speaking ability about their experiences advocating for their children. Most of these mothers are undocumented immigrants, but have children who attend public school and access health care. The policy brief is based on a study Lo published in Sociological Perspectives in February.
This new policy brief is one of 11 that are now available in both English and Spanish at the Center for Poverty Research website. All resources in Spanish are available in the section Recursos en Espa簽ol.
Read the on low-income immigrant mothers ( or .
The is one of three federally designated centers whose mission is to facilitate and disseminate nonpartisan academic research on poverty in the U.S. and to train the next generation of poverty scholars.
Media Resources
Alex Russell, Center for Poverty and Inequality Research, 530-752-4798, parussell@ucdavis.edu
Karen Nikos-Rose, News and Media Relations, 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu