Failure is not an Option: Parental Expectations of Nigerian Voluntary Immigrants to the United States

  • Adeniji-Neill D
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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to explore the socio-cultural and educational contexts of parental expectations of Nigerian voluntary immigrants to the United States. Immigrant or voluntary minorities are people who have migrated essentially of their own volition to the United States, or any other nation, because they seek more economic mobility, or a better life in general, and/or political freedom (Ogbu, 1995). This case study sought an explanation for the success in education attributed to these new African immigrants and their children. This study investigated the relationship among three factors: (a) parental expectations,;The purpose of this study was to explore the socio-cultural and educational contexts of parental expectations of Nigerian voluntary immigrants to the United States. Immigrant or voluntary minorities are people who have migrated essentially of their own volition to the United States, or any other nation, because they seek more economic mobility, or a better life in general, and/or political freedom (Ogbu, 1995). This case study sought an explanation for the success in education attributed to these new African immigrants and their children. The results of the study represent the Nigerian immigrants' worldviews: a folk theory shaped by their cultural and life experiences.;

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Adeniji-Neill, D. (2012). Failure is not an Option: Parental Expectations of Nigerian Voluntary Immigrants to the United States. Ethnicity and Race in a Changing World, 3(1), 3–16. https://doi.org/10.7227/erct.3.1.1

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