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New Book Blames Latino Culture for High Drop-Out Rate

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Posted on: February 25th, 2008
Filed Under: Education, Hispanic News, Language Issues, Press Releases
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“In his controversial , Clipping Their Own Wings, author Ernesto Caravantes tackles one of the nation’s most troubling trends and toughest social problems: Latino underachievement, and focuses the root of the problem squarely on the shoulders of the Latino culture itself. Hispanics are now, officially, the largest minority with 35 million living in the United States, exceeding African Americans in number. Despite the sizeable numbers, this minority group is doing poorly in education. For the past 40 years, the average number of Hispanic high school dropouts has been more than twice what it has been for African Americans. These dismal numbers are encrusted deep within the identity politics of educators, policymakers and other influencers, despite their best compassionate attempts to empower Latinos with studies, education and identity politics. To Caravantes, it is a malfunction of good intentions.

Caravantes defies conventional wisdom and shatters notions that Latino underachievement is due exclusively to under funded schools and overcrowded classrooms, coupled with socioeconomic disadvantages common to this group. Caravantes does not entirely dispute these causal factors, but instead argues that Latinos are contributing to their own oppression by stubbornly refusing to learn English and devaluing the importance of education.

The dares to say what no one else has dared to say about the Latino culture. Caravantes claims, “Hispanics are lagging behind as a result of ignorantly and stubbornly adhering to cultural aspects that do not place education at the top of its values hierarchy and instead, are clipping their own wings by refusing to assimilate into the American educational system.” Unless Latinos rethink these values and considers change, no amount of money, books or happy identity talk will make a dent in the problem.

This , in the hands of the right people in both educational and legislative circles, can make a major contribution to calling attention to the real and ignored problem of educational complacency and apathy in a culture which clearly doesn’t understand that education is the key to a brighter future.

Ernesto Caravantes is a native Angeleno who grew up in Lakewood, CA, the only son of Mexican immigrant . If you would like to contact him, he can be reached at:

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*From: http://www.pr.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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