Sentences with phrase «chinese immigrant families»

Of the limited number of studies done on Chinese immigrants in North America in the areas of parenting and child development, several showed that Chinese immigrant families who had prolonged parent - child separation experienced elevated risks of socio - emo - tional and behavioral problems in the child, as well as strained parent - child rela - tionships [3][9][20].
At a time when other urban disadvantaged populations, with the help of early childhood intervention services, are trying to strengthen families and promote social cohesion, Chinese immigrant families that practice reverse - migration separation are heading the opposite direction.
It sheds light on specific needs of Chinese immigrant families who have to send their child to China to be raised while parents work in the U.S.. By studying closely the unique circumstances pertaining to prolonged separation, parenting practice, and related family challenges (low income, parental stress, lack of social support), preventive measures can be developed to promote and safeguard the overall wellbeing of the parent and the child.
The present study used a qualitative research approach to understand the experiences and perspectives of service providers who worked with children of Chinese immigrant families that went through separation and faced challenges after reunification in the U.S. Focus groups and key informant interviews were conducted with 20 healthcare providers, school teachers, social workers, and child and family service practitioners.
Many Chinese immigrant families used webcams regularly for communicating with their child and caretakers in China [10].
Many Chinese immigrant families served by these providers shared a number of social adversity factors that might impact on parent - child relationship and parenting outcomes [21][33].
This study explored the experiences and perspectives of service providers on the possible developmental impacts of reverse - migration separation on returning children of Chinese immigrant families in New York City.
The researcher recently completed a qualitative study to explore the lived experiences of Chinese immigrant families that went through prolonged separation and reunification, and understand their attitudes, perceptions, and reactions to the separation and reunification process [10].
The stories include those of the son of Holocaust survivors, Puerto Rican and Chinese immigrant families.
A wealthy Chinese immigrant family finds their fortunes dashed and their future in question — with surprisingly hilarious results — in this rollicking debut novel from the Los Angeles - based Chang, a YA editor at Goodreads who has also worked as a journalist and editor.
A hilarious debut novel about a wealthy but fractured Chinese immigrant family that had it all, only to lose every last cent - and about the road trip they take across America that binds them back together.

Not exact matches

Noah Ready - Campbell, who grew up in a small mountain town in Vermont, and Calvin Young, a Chinese immigrant whose family settled in the Virginia when he was 2 years old, both landed scholarship admission to boarding school (Philips Exeter and North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, respectively).
«It's an attractive idea in a lot of ways,» says Harvard Graduate School of Education Assistant Professor Vivian Louie, whose research looks at the role of the immigrant family in the educational experiences of second - generation Chinese Americans who are consistently presented as high academic achievers.
With my finance being of Chinese descent, I have enjoyed a first - hand look into the culture and beliefs of an immigrant Asian family.
Sly, funny, intelligent, and artfully structured, The Fortunes recasts American history through the lives of Chinese Americans and reimagines the multigenerational novel through the fractures of immigrant family experience.
But in her fourth novel, The Spy Lover (Thomas & Mercer), she pulls from her Alabama - born father's family history to tell a gripping Civil War story about three complicated, suffering people — a nurse who's spying for the Union behind enemy lines, a Chinese immigrant who escapes his conscription into the Confederacy to fight for the Union instead, and a wounded Confederate cavalryman.
The horrors of Tiananmen Square, a faltering marriage, and a poet's need to write complicate the already daunting obstacles facing immigrants striving to achieve the American dream in this tender and penetrating novel about a Chinese family reinventing home.
Family service professionals, child development providers, and school teachers who work with American - born Chinese children of reverse - migration face great challenges especially when the specific needs of these children and their immigrant families are unknown to them.
Low - income Chinese immigrants without extended family are faced with the dilemma of whether to raise their children in the U.S. or have them sent back to home country to be raised.
Towards a Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate and Responsive Family Engagement Model for Low Income Chinese Immigrant Parents in San Francisco: A Qualitative Analysis (Doctoral dissertation.).
During the Chinese Parent Cafes development process, the Parent Cafe process was reviewed and field tested for cultural appropriateness, tagging for Chinese immigrants, multigenerational grandparents co-parenting approach, American born Chinese, and all families for relevance.
We work with caucasian, African American, men and women of color, black, mixed - race and inter-racial couples and families, latino, hispanic, Asian American (Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Japanese, Philippine), Asian Indian, Native American, Arab, immigrants, Jewish (orthodox, conservative and reform), Muslim, Christian, Hindu, Hinduism, Hindi, Buddhist as well as agnostic and atheist clients.
Filial therapy with immigrant Chinese families.
Summary: (To include comparison groups, outcomes, measures, notable limitations) The purpose of this study was to determine the effectiveness of intensive filial therapy [now called Child - Parent Relationship Therapy (CPRT)-RSB- as an intervention for immigrant Chinese families.
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