Abstract
The challenges and opportunities associated with the education of immigrants predate modern school systems,
though it certainly can be said that support for public schooling grew—for example, in Canada and
the United States—as dominant (read White, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant) groups came to see the importance
of integrating masses of disparate origin. Educational responses to the children of immigrants over time have
been varied, and many responses are indistinguishable from efforts to address other minority groups.
In North America, the rapid expansion of immigration encompassing immigrant and refugee populations
from around the world, particularly since the 1960s, has led to a number of structural and curricular
changes in schools, only some of which were explicitly aimed at immigrants. One example of a policy aimed
at the children of immigrants was bilingual education, and as this increasingly fell out of favor, ESL (English
as a second language) classrooms became more common. However, with few exceptions, neither has been
a very effective instrument for addressing the interests or concerns of immigrants themselves. Nevertheless,
most parents strongly prefer that their children learn to master the dominant language, as a means of getting
ahead.