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White preservice teachers' perceptions about low-income Latino students identified as struggling readers /Salas, Rachel Gortarez, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 315-330). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
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La lengua española en los Estados UnidosSun, Wei 11 1900 (has links)
Speakers of Spanish in the United States are living perhaps the most interesting
linguistic experience in the entire Hispanic world. The present study deals with the theme of
the Spanish language in contact with English and the problems related with social
bilingualism.
The first part of Chapter I recounts the principal incidents in the history of Spanish
expansion, and outlines the route of the advance of the Spanish language throughout the
American continent. The second part of Chapter I presents statistical tables pertaining to
immigrants, and explains the geographic and demographic distribution of Hispanics in the
United States. Chapter II is a linguistic study of the varieties of Spanish found in the United
States, along with lexical examples from daily use, and grammatical characteristics. Chapter
III provides an academic classification according to the sociolinguistic and sociocultural
factors which affect the Spanish language. Chapter IV presents the linguistic deviations
produced by factors at the phonological, morphological, syntactical, lexical, semantic and
grammatical level. Chapter V concentrates on the bilingual element of U.S. society. Three
tables demonstrate the distribution of English and Spanish according to the sociolinguistic
context and the type of text involved. In addition, three studies are presented to deepen our
knowledge of bilingualism, as well as its causes and consequences.
The conclusion must take into account the fact that it will not be possible to
assimilate Hispanics as easily as has been done with people of other cultures in the United
States, since the group renews itself continuously through the presence of recently arrived
Hispanic immigrants, and those who have recently returned.
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Parent antibiotics knowledge, expectations, physician perceptions, and antibiotic prescribing behavior how do Latino immigrants fare? /Montenegro, Roberto Emilio. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--UCLA, 2008. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 257-269).
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La lengua española en los Estados UnidosSun, Wei 11 1900 (has links)
Speakers of Spanish in the United States are living perhaps the most interesting
linguistic experience in the entire Hispanic world. The present study deals with the theme of
the Spanish language in contact with English and the problems related with social
bilingualism.
The first part of Chapter I recounts the principal incidents in the history of Spanish
expansion, and outlines the route of the advance of the Spanish language throughout the
American continent. The second part of Chapter I presents statistical tables pertaining to
immigrants, and explains the geographic and demographic distribution of Hispanics in the
United States. Chapter II is a linguistic study of the varieties of Spanish found in the United
States, along with lexical examples from daily use, and grammatical characteristics. Chapter
III provides an academic classification according to the sociolinguistic and sociocultural
factors which affect the Spanish language. Chapter IV presents the linguistic deviations
produced by factors at the phonological, morphological, syntactical, lexical, semantic and
grammatical level. Chapter V concentrates on the bilingual element of U.S. society. Three
tables demonstrate the distribution of English and Spanish according to the sociolinguistic
context and the type of text involved. In addition, three studies are presented to deepen our
knowledge of bilingualism, as well as its causes and consequences.
The conclusion must take into account the fact that it will not be possible to
assimilate Hispanics as easily as has been done with people of other cultures in the United
States, since the group renews itself continuously through the presence of recently arrived
Hispanic immigrants, and those who have recently returned. / Arts, Faculty of / French, Hispanic, and Italian Studies, Department of / Graduate
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