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Insight into an Immigrant’s Perspective

At first I believed this class might be boring. There’s only so much one can learn about immigration, or so I thought. What we did in this course definitely proved me wrong. The subject matter was made interesting with hands-on learning via projects and walking tours.

My favorite project was the interview with an immigrant. At first I couldn’t think of anyone but thankfully a good friend reminded me that she was a South Korean immigrant and agreed to let me interview her. Thanks to the interview project, I was able to understand her a bit better, why her family moved here, and why she’s so intent on returning one day.

My personal essay was the hardest to write. It was difficult learning about my family. Neither of my parents quite know their family history, they never bothered to ask their parents. However, what little information they did know interested me quite a bit, such as how my family decided to get into America by going through Canada.

The statistical profile was not my favorite project but it wasn’t the hardest. The one part about it that I enjoyed was making graphs on Excel. If nothing else, that’s the one thing my parents drilled into me. The hardest part was finding out why my immigrant group made their way up to New York City. There seemed to be very little information to be found on this.

It was not only just the projects, but also the readings as well that gave an insight into the lives of people I’d never really thought about before. Immigrants make up New York City, they make up our country and this is, without a doubt, a topic people need to be aware of.

Missing the Homeland

Jenny, a 20-year-old woman from South Korea, speaks about why she misses home:

I want to go back to Korea. No offense but I don’t like it here. I don’t like the way everything is set up. In Korea you can go anywhere by walking. On every street there are little stores. Where I live now you have to drive a car, I’m 30 minutes from the nearest store. Also the subways are much cleaner than here. There are also glass doors. The train arrives and there are glass doors to prevent people from falling into the tracks. Here it’s so dirty, and smelly, and there are cockroaches, and rats.

Difficulties of the English Language

Jenny, a 20-year-old woman from South Korea, speaks of her difficulties with learning English:

I didn’t even have friends. When I first came here English was my biggest problem. I did not understand a single word they said. And the kids made fun of me because I didn’t know English, I feel like they were talking about me but I didn’t get it. […] My mom tried so many things on me. She tried phonics, she tried vocab words, she tried movies, she tried TV shows, making me read newspapers, none of that worked. […] I was a total failure though. I started understanding English from school. I started talking to the teacher one-on-one. That kind of worked.

Making the Process Look Easy

Jenny, a 20-year-old woman from South Korea, briefly states why moving to New York City was easy for her family:

My dad came with a student visa and then he got a green card because his company sponsored him. So it was kind of a great thing for us. After like a year of arriving here we got our green card.

 

The Jamaican Language

As shown in the graph below, the proportion of foreign-born Jamaicans five years and older that are fluent in English greatly exceeds other foreign-born immigrant groups.  In 2011, about 97% of foreign-born Jamaicans were found to speak English well at their homes (ACS 2009-2011.)  With the exception of the language Patois or Patwa, which is a mixture of English and African dialects, Jamaica is an English-speaking country.  By having English as the official language, generations of Jamaican families use English to communicate with their newly arrived family at home instead of a foreign tongue that most immigrant groups use to communicate at home.  Thanks to this, Jamaicans having a strong fluency in English will lead them to having a much faster integration into American society because the linguistic barrier will be removed.

the ultimate jamaican graph

Jennafer Tells the Story of the Laneri Experience

The Sky’s the Limit

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Jennafer at St. Francis Prep

My name is Jennafer Mukofsky.  I was born in Miami, but I mainly grew up in Howard Beach, Queens.  What interests me most is watching and playing tennis.  I’ve been playing since I was six and I’ve competed in many and have won a few tournaments.  My dream is to travel the world and see all four of the Grand Slams live.  I plan to major in finance, and hope to start as a stock trader and work my way up to portfolio manager/analyst and possibly even higher.

 

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