During a recent visit with a high school friend, I was
sharing about my experiences as a college professor and my scholarly
interests. My friend recommended that I
read the book, Just Like Us (Thorpe,
2009). The book tells the story of four
young Mexican women as they transition from their last year of high school
through four years of college. While the
women all share the same heritage, only two of them were undocumented. Their stories unfold amidst both state and
national debate related to immigration policy.
Family transitions and a notable local shooting of a police officer by
an undocumented immigrant also fuel the account. While the story telling was a little bumpy at
times, the book did provide some unique insights into a very complicated social,
political, and economic issue.
The four young women featured in Just Like Us shared the quality of being very academically successful. The undocumented status of two of the women
significantly shaped the choices related to pursuing higher education. They were highly capable, but unable to
access funding structures that typically help students pay the steep costs of
college. Eventually, all four women
found a college. Like most students, their college experience was not only a
time for academic learning, but also a time for also learning about themselves
within the wider world.
The overarching theme of immigration is far too complicated
and beyond the scope of this blog, but as I read Just Like Us, I was continually struck by the familiarity of the
content. Familiarity? No, this is not a story that connects with my
own life narrative. Rather, the experiences
shared about the four young women in the book could have been replaced by
stories that I have heard first hand from students. I can only recall one situation where
students even broached the topic of their status, but through focus groups and
1:1 discussions, Latino/a students have shared their perceptions of being
judged by both their professors and peers.
Like the characters in this story, several students have shared the
challenges of making the transition from a high school that has a higher
percentage of students of color to a campus that is predominately middle-class Caucasian. The transition challenges come from not only
racial and ethnic differences, but also differences of socioeconomic
status. These students are often negotiating
a bi-cultural identity which sometimes forces them to restrict parts of themselves
in order to serve that they see as the manifestation of the self that is
desired by one outside group or another.
I am admittedly overwhelmed by the larger issues related to
immigration. The political and social
layers of this question have not become any more clear since 2009. In fact, the questions become more
complicated as we hear about the rising number of unaccompanied children who
are coming into the United States from Mexico and Central America. We can only imagine the trauma that these
children have faced in their home countries and the continuing struggle as they
try to find a place to call home.
One step that we can all take is to listen to larger
narrative and then look for opportunities to know the individual stories so
that we can develop a more critical understanding of the issues.
Thorpe, H.
(2009). Just Like Us: The True Story of
Four Mexican Girls Coming of Age in America.
New York: Schribner.
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