The Children of Immigrants and Host
Society Educational Systems: Mexicans in
the United States and North Africans in
France
RICHARD ALBA
City University of New York
ROXANE SILBERMAN
Paris School of Economics
Background/Context: The educational fate of the children of low-wage immigrants is a
salient issue in all the economically developed societies that have received major immigration
flows since the 1950s. The article considers the way in which educational systems in the two
countries structure the educational experiences and shape the opportunities of the children
of immigrants.
Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: This article examines the experience
of the children of Mexican immigrants in the United States and of North African immi-
grants in France. Both groups are low-wage labor migrants with low educational attain-
ment relative to the native born.
Research Design: The article uses data from the U.S. Census and the 2003 Formation
Qualification Professionelle Survey in France, as well as analysis of other research on the
two countries to compare educational processes and attainment for the two groups.
Conclusions/Recommendations: The comparison of the two systems shows that although the
French and U.S. educational systems differ in many ways, the outcomes are in fact quite
similar. In both systems, the children of low-wage labor migrants are tracked into the low
streams of the educational hierarchy and have lower attainment than their native-born
peers. At the same time, in both countries, a small percentage of children of immigrants do
manage to succeed. The authors conclude that despite apparent differences between the two
Teachers College Record Volume 111, Number 6, June 2009, pp. 1444–0000
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