Migrant Children and Education: Is There a “Migrant Challenge”?

Parents International supports strategies to overcome linguistic challenges faced by migrant children in education
Language barriers impact migrant children in education. Parents International calls for inclusive strategies to bridge these gaps effectively

Child Up Final Conference: Insights into Migrant Children and Education

Child Up Final Conference in Brussels, 9-10 June 2022 – what we had to say as a member of their International Stakeholder Committee.

The Child Up project was dealing with child agency and especially the agency and recognition of agency in the case of migrant children and education. It is a crucial element of their inclusion. We were invited to contribute on practice related to this topic. The input from IPA Director, Eszter Salamon, was highlighting some aspects we rarely consider, and also on how engaging parents can support child agency.

When it comes to adults understanding that children have agency and supporting its development, it is worth having a historical look at how much adults have trusted children that they are capable of doing things. Jesper Juul, the renowned and recently deceased family therapist from Denmark, raises this issue in his last book, Leitwölfe Sein (Be the Leader of a Pack of Wolves), that has not yet been published in English.

In the book, he calls parents to behave like the leader of a pack of wolves normally behaves: set directions, allow all members to fight for their status, but support the weaker ones. However, he also mentions that the later – the key to child agency – is a moving target; the view of parents on this has been changing over time.

The child rights movement has tried to make all adults understand that children are rights holders and have agency in their own right. Juul makes a link between this and the women’s rights movement. In 2022, it is difficult to believe that even a few decades ago women were not allowed to open their own bank account without their father or husband signing it off in some European countries, and we still don’t see the full emancipation of women.

And the suffragettes had chained themselves to railings about a century ago. The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) is only a little over 30 years old, and children – especially younger children – are unlikely to start a juvenile suffragette-like movement. So it is up to the adults in their lives, especially their parents, to fight for the recognition of their agency. Hopefully, in the case of migrant children and education, it will not take more than a hundred years, but in this area again, we are very far from being there.

Parents International emphasizes the role of trust in promoting agency for migrant children and education globally
Trusting the agency of migrant children is key to inclusion. Parents International advocates for empowering migrant children in education

At the same time, American parenting approaches are becoming popular in Europe. The USA, being the only country in the World that has not and most probably will not ratify the UNCRC, does not believe in child agency. Parents can even be punished for what the Americans call free-range parenting, parenting that believes in child agency. These ideas entered Europe at about the same time as the child rights movement started.

As a result, there is already a younger adult generation, becoming parents or already young parents these days, who were not as free as children 40-50 years ago. It seems that the generation of European parents who were born during or shortly after WWII still understood that children are capable of a lot of things and can be trusted. This perspective significantly impacts the way we address migrant children and education today.

Migrant Children and Education: Challenges

When families arrive from outside of Europe, their children often have experiences with the recognition of and support for their agency. They are often trusted much more than their European-born counterparts. So, why is it different at school? Why was a whole large-scale project built on supporting the agency of these children at school?

We believe that it is not a migrant issue, but rather an amalgam of different elements that are more prevalent in certain migrant children – not one-by-one, but present at the same time: social disadvantage, linguistic register, age, and considering the multiple inclusion needs of the child.

We say certain because the whole picture changes if you don’t only focus on children who are third-country nationals but also on EU migrants. Why do we face different challenges in education when we look at, for example, Italian or Polish migrant children in the Netherlands than when it is Syrian or – to stay within Europe – Ukrainian migrants? This complexity underlines the necessity of nuanced approaches to migrant children and education.

Parents International promotes engaging migrant parents to improve outcomes in migrant children and education
Parental engagement is crucial for migrant children and education. Parents International leads efforts to empower parents and children alike

Holistic Approaches to Inclusion and Child Agency

There is a good reason why nearly all programs that are designed to support the inclusion of Roma children in Eastern Europe work brilliantly for “migrant children,” more precisely for children who come from similarly difficult backgrounds. These children often have parents who have low education levels and fear the “authority” school may have over them.

We have also experienced that the case is similar when it comes to language. Teachers – while totally capable of adjusting their linguistic register to children – struggle with communicating with parents of these children. The reason is more often the linguistic register than the total lack of language skills. Again, what works in Roma inclusion can also work in the case of migrant parents. Often, there is also a lack of related cultural knowledge on the teachers’ side.

Linguistic register is a crucial question in designing classroom activities. A very important finding of research that our colleague, Luca László, has emphasized often shows that tackling children as “migrants” may mislead you in analyzing learning outcomes, as it easily leads to mixing up lower learning outcomes as a result of a child struggling with the vocabulary of Mathematics with having lower skills levels in Mathematics. Allowing children to work in the language they feel comfortable with leads to much better school results – and AI translation is already at a very high level, so teachers can easily understand what they are producing.

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