Minority Immigrants: A Community Analysis

Improved Essays
To engage the different communities, one must first be aware of their cultures, and this can be done by given a survey to each member of the community. It is important to assess their needs, and what matters to them while explaining the project in a town hall meeting or during discharge from the hospital visits. The best way to reach out to minority immigrants is to go to them, to their place of worship. Get the church involvement, as well as their pastors. Find out about their rituals, and their pass to understand their lifestyle. For example, from the video, during an interview with Terrol Dew Johnson, he stated, “I think it's really important for the ideas and the actions to come from the community, because it gives a sense of ownership,

Related Documents

  • Great Essays

    The case takes place on December 28, 2009 at a condominium in Halifax, where the appellant, Erin Lee MacDonald, was entertaining coworkers before the whole incident occurred. Throughout the evening, loud music was coming from the unit which resulted in the building’s concierge, Mr. Sears, to receive a noise complaint from another tenant. He knocked on MacDonald’s door and received no response, however as he was about to depart, he witnessed the guests exiting the unit. Mr. Sears took this opportunity to ask Mr. MacDonald to lower the volume of his music, however the man refused and began to hurl foul language directed at the concierge. This prompted Mr. Sears to contact the Halifax Regional Police who sent out Constable Pierce to deal with the situation.…

    • 1813 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Roger Daniels, in his novel, “Not Like Us: Immigrants and Minorities in America”, highlights the terrible conditions and undertakings immigrants and minorities had to face through early to modern America. He presents his argument through different people, starting with the Chinese and Chinese Exclusion Act during the industrial era and going on into detail with the treatment Native Americans, African Americans, and other minorities throughout time. He states in his thesis that he simply wishes not to “negate or minimize other aspects of that turbulent and dramatic period.”, but instead to emphasize the side of history that is usually glossed over by historians. He does successfully in context highlight the true reality minorities and immigrants faced throughout this specific time period, and while he does have a compelling argument and evidence to back it up, there are some minor critiques in an otherwise beautifully constructed novel.…

    • 641 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    As the child of an immigrant family, the immigration policies are of great importance to my family along with many other families. The immigration policies affect many legal and illegal immigrant families and their U.S. born children. The ever-changing laws pertaining to immigrants and how to handle them splits families apart and deports citizens acting fully within the law who have done nothing to deserve their unjust treatment. The laws regarding the deportation of immigrants are never fully clear and are constantly changing thus, leaving many immigrants lost and confused as to their situations not knowing if they are going to be removed from the country at any moment. An immigrant may apply for a residency renewal and find themselves in…

    • 357 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    As applied social workers, it is important to understand how migration, immigration, and documentation or lack there of affects the Hispanic community’s coping abilities and access to health care when being confronted with a terminal illness. This community is a diverse population with a large array of health care needs, and for some families their immigrations status, length of time in the U.S, and movement within the country will influence their knowledge concerning services, and can consequently, have a negative affects on them receiving proper medical services. A person’s immigration status and ethnicity can directly impact access to health care, housing, employment, and overall health and mental health services in the US (Carrión, 2007).…

    • 232 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Immigration is a controversial issue in the United States. Whether, it is kicking illegal immigrants out of the country or stopping immigrants from entering in the first place, one thing is for sure immigration is the topic of the day. However, when the U.S looks at the illegal immigrants, instead of seeing the situations that they have been dealt with, we view them as a threat. In the story, Mother’s Tongue, an illegal immigrant named Jose Luis comes to the U.S in the search for a better life and finds out that accomplishing that will not be as easy as he thinks. He is considered a criminal in the eyes of the U.S., because he didn’t take the necessary steps it takes to be a legal resident.…

    • 1370 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Health professionals are urged to interact in activities for assistance. In health care minority populations have poorer health and barriers to accessing certain health care facilities. The health disruption for individuals in these population grouping is a vital priority. The growth of ethnic communities, each with its own cultural trait and health…

    • 631 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Old immigrants, such as the British, are settlers that came to the Americas, mostly from western and northern Europe, mostly from England and English territories. Firstly, old immigration they came to the Americas as families or groups and were literate and skilled. Moreover, old British immigrants came to the Americas for a wide variety of reasons such as political, social, and economic reasonings. The political reasoning would be because they would have freedoms. Socially they would have their religious freedom and economically they would be able to own more land.…

    • 957 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In America, there are women here who built a life here in the United States. Many of these women who built a life here in the United States, are not all Americans, they are immigrants. Immigrants are people who come to live permanently in a foreign country. Majority of the time, immigrants are discriminated numerous times, mainly by Americans. For this reason, immigrant women face difficult hardships living in the U.S. Discriminating immigrants in the U.S. is wrong because for that reason, immigrant women face hardships when looking for a job or simply fitting into society.…

    • 1092 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Immigrant Community

    • 1275 Words
    • 6 Pages

    While some success is apparent in reaching goals of employment and English language abilities, overall indicators suggest many refugee households need assistance with job placement and language training beyond their first year in the U.S.(Shaw & Poulin, 2015). Actually, as soon as they arrive, acculturation to a new society is difficult for all immigrant groups, regardless of age and country of origin (Baffoe, Cheung, & Asimeng-Boahene, 2012). The critical issues are involved in the multiple struggles of acculturation of immigrant and refugee in their new environments. Buffoe et al.…

    • 1275 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Often times immigrant parents and children adapt differently to the American Culture. For example, because children are so young they are able to better absorb and adapt to the new culture that they are now apart of. “When I first arrived at Boston College, I immediately knew that my conservative cultural position would have to become more open-minded. I knew that not everyone had grown up with strict Bolivian parents, as I had. I would not have to lose my cultural identity, however.”…

    • 423 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Immigration America are known as the land of opportunity among immigrants, because U.S. is able to provide the immigrants with a variety, of life opportunity that they wouldn’t have had in their own countries, such as higher education, economic stability and, etc. America is home to world’s largest immigrant populations with more than 41 million, and is by far the largest economy in the world, but native views about the immigrants are mixed. Half (51%) of Americans this year, said immigrant’s makes the United States economy stronger because of their low wage, hard work and talents. Meantime 41% said immigrants are a problem because they still “our” jobs, and housing. Studies shows that Immigrant do take some jobs away from the natives, but also immigrants entrepreneurs bring in additional revenue, create jobs, and contribute significantly to the economy.…

    • 588 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Become a american Many Latin Americans had been living in the us for a very long time and now they want to send em back to mexico many Latins had been living since 1950,. Latino immigrants built communities in many northern cities. They found jobs in large businesses. Some people worked in auto factories.now in 2008 many Latin immigrants are going to south Detroit to have a better life some this Latina iirgrent said that we came here to have a beter life we work hard and maid this place are home we had found south Detroit are home that what a Latin person said how they feel, Today, millions of people in the United States call themselves Mexican immigrants.…

    • 242 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Immigrant Challenges

    • 639 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Sometimes one of the biggest challenges for individuals in the immigrant community is a lack of awareness of the challenges they face on the part of other immigrants. As a Peruvian citizen from an educated family, and a U.S. green card holder, I have been peripherally aware of differences in the experiences of individuals based on their immigration and socioeconomic status. A recent experience intensified my focus on those differences. It was learning about the life of a boy sitting next to my little brother in our living room one afternoon that inspired me to educate myself, so I would be more aware of the challenges faced by those immigrants who lacked advantages I have.…

    • 639 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Immigrants leave their native country in search for a better life and opportunities for themselves and their children. Many of these immigrants escape from poverty, violence, and war but still continue to face discrimination and difficulties. I learned that the government prevented ethnic minority groups from gaining a proper education and equal opportunity based on racial identity. For example, the Chinese in Canada struggled for over 100 years before the country granted them equal rights such as voting. The early Chinese settlers could have benefitted the Canadian economy and society through higher education and learning the language Chinese Americans, and Chinese Canadians were treated very similar in their host country.…

    • 277 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Bijay Rai ESOL 043 Sep/22/2015 Memorable Experience I had remarkable experienced before I moved here in USA. I was getting ready for new life in different country. In 2012, I did all my legal immigration paper work after I had decided to migrate.…

    • 396 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays