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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "What happens to the children in the immigrant communities when they grow up?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I just want to reiterate what others are saying here. For working class immigrants, it typically takes several generations to accumulate wealth and hit the kind of middle class respectability that OP appears to be looking for. Yes, there are exceptions, and we celebrate those exceptions, but at the population level social mobility is hard and slow. I'm the second/third generation born in the United States to a variety of Eastern and Southern European immigrants. At the time that my great-grandparents and/or grandparents immigrated, it was generally assumed that Polish, Italian, Spanish, Russian, etc immigrants were incapable to learning English and entering the middle class. My grandparents' generation included a carpenter, a janitor, a SAHM, and a domestic laborer. [b]My parents' generation (with siblings) included a nurse, a teacher, someone who owned their own construction agency, and a SAHM. My generation includes a city planner, a lawyer, a veterinarian, and a senior military official. [/b] If you had looked at us after only one generation in the United States, you might have wondered if we were taking advantage of the resources this country was offering, but the truth is that social mobility is hard. [/quote] Many people chose nursing and teaching because they want to help and are from MC/UMC backgrounds. But maybe it does not appeal to certain groups because you don't make much money. I am an immigrant and I am a nurse (RN-people use nurse to describe other professions) and it's interesting to see that many of the young ones coming in are from white MC/UMC backgrounds vs. the older nurses from more diverse SES backgrounds. It's become more sought after/competitive to get into good BSN programs. [/quote]
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