Abstract
This paper examines how refugee youth strategically navigate learning during the first years of resettlement. Interweaving frameworks of youth agency and culturally responsive pedagogy (CRP), we investigate how refugees learn, how they perceive instruction in the U.S., and what they recommend teachers do to support them. Analysis of interview and observational data reveals that teens engage in productive learning strategies after school but have less agency to enact these strategies during school. Also emphasized in this study is teens’ desire for more rigorous coursework in secondary schools. Drawing from our findings, we theoretically propose that teens—not just teachers—have roles in implementing CRP. Thus, implications for research include the need for a greater focus on how resettled refugee youth mediate learning for one another and how teachers can learn about and empower youth to draw upon their Funds of Strategies as they strive to implement CRP.
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12 November 2018
The original version of this article unfortunately contained a mistake in the co-author name. The co-author name should be Maria Zybina instead it was published incorrectly as Mariz Zybina. The original article has been corrected.
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Funding was provided by American Educational Research Association (Research in Service to Practice Grant) and Peabody College (Small Research Grant).
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The original version of this article was revised: Typo in co-author name has been corrected.
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Daniel, S.M., Zybina, M. Resettled Refugee Teens’ Perspectives: Identifying a Need to Centralize Youths’ “Funds of Strategies” in Future Efforts to Enact Culturally Responsive Pedagogy. Urban Rev 51, 345–368 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11256-018-0484-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11256-018-0484-7