Essays

Latino, black boys score lowest on math, science tests

Sara Inés Calderón | April 9, 2013 | 1:04 am
A new study published in Psychology of Women Quarterly found that Latino and African American males scored the lowest on 10th grade math and science tests while Asians, particularly male Asians, scored the highest. The study examined 10th grade year-end tests in math and science at five Philadelphia, Pennsylvania high schools with diverse populations. According to a report:
The researchers took family income and education levels into account, finding that white students in the sample were much more likely to come from higher-income families with greater parental education and more books in the home, despite living in the same neighborhoods and attending the same schools as their peers from other ethnic groups.
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Study: How to find a racist on Twitter

Sara Inés Calderón | April 4, 2013 | 12:47 am
A study from the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR) in the United Kingdom titled, “Who Matters Online: Measuring influence, evaluating content and countering violent extremism in online social networks” has examined the problem of extremists using social media. Utilizing white supremacists in the United States as an example, the study isolated several factors that people can use to measure who is worth “keeping an eye on” when it comes to extremism on social media.… more

Study: No such thing as the Latino vote, Latinos critical to economy

Elaine Rita Mendus | February 26, 2013 | 1:40 am
A recent data set released by the Pew Research Hispanic Center allows us to look at the dominance of the Mexican vote, the crawl to Puerto Rican statehood, and the issues that the Hispanic population present to the U.S. economy. We strongly encourage reading the linked part one and part two of this series of articles for additional context. 1.) There is no such thing as “the Latino vote.” Yep, there is no Latino vote. It’s simply the Mexican vote as far as national politics are concerned.… more

Study: Latinos know English, don’t graduate college and rent

Elaine Rita Mendus | February 20, 2013 | 10:52 pm
The Pew Hispanic Center recently released data on the Latino population in the U.S. The first of Más Wired’s look at the Pew Center’s massive data release, we focused on population data and other demographics. Now we are going to look at education and economics. When talking about immigrants, there is always the issue of language. Language can help create distinct divisions in the culture of a nation, and be a source of resentment among the established population. In some locals like Canada, entire regions of a country can be left speaking a different language, and living in a different culture, than the majority of the country.… more

Latinos, immigrants, finish STEM at different rates

Sara Inés Calderón | January 27, 2013 | 9:21 pm
A study from the National Center for Educational Statistics recently looked at the educational attainment of Latino and Asian immigrants, and undergraduates who had immigrant parents. The study compiled data from the 2007-2008 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study. The study, “New Americans in Postsecondary Education,” found that immigrants’ educational attainment rates lag behind the native-born U.S. population. According to the study about 23% of all undergraduates were immigrants, 10%, or had an immigrant parent, 13%.… more

In Mexico, Twitter used by few to inform many

Elaine Rita Mendus | | 7:33 pm
A recently published paper by Microsoft employees is taking a close look at Twitter usage during the Mexican drug wars. The paper, “The New War Correspondents: The Rise of Civic Media Curation in Urban Warfare,” written by Andrés Monroy-Hernández, Danah Boyd, Emre Kiciman, Munmun De Choudhury, and Scott Counts analyzes hashtag use by people in four cities in Mexico, tweet volume in periods of peace and violence, as well as an analysis of the rise of civilian public information officers in the Twitter world.… more

Where are all the Latino bloggers?

Sara Inés Calderón | January 15, 2013 | 1:13 am
This post is republished with permission from Latinopia.com. I live on the Internet, so, sometimes my perspective on things can be a bit warped. How some people have managed to avoid Facebook and Twitter escapes me, for example, but then again not everyone works in the media industry. But, being that I do occupy the digital space so often, there’s a very stark and obvious problem that I frequently encounter: just like real life, Latinos are not as populous online. Let me define what I mean a bit more.… more

Affordable ed in California with open source textbooks

Elaine Rita Mendus | November 14, 2012 | 8:32 pm
Rising costs of tuition and textbooks are not unknown to college students and there’s historically been little in terms of relief for these rising costs aside from used book sales and the (still expensive) e-book market. However, California’s 20 Million Minds foundation has been helping make the textbook costs easier to swallow for students by promoting the idea of a open source library. The answer to cutting tuition costs may begin with the signing of State Bill 1052 and SB 1053 into state law.  … more

Help Mexico’s top math student continue her education

Sara Inés Calderón | November 3, 2012 | 11:05 pm
You may recall the story of Paloma Noyola Martínez. She’s the 11 year-old who is the  top math student in Mexico, according to the national Enlace test. She and her family are part of a community of people who live by scavenging in a dump in Matamoros, Tamaulipas (the city across from Brownsville, Texas). After we ran the story many of our readers wanted to know how they could help contribute to Paloma’s education, which was in question because of her family’s ability to pay for her to continue to study.… more
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Florida lowers standards for Latino, black students

Sara Inés Calderón | October 18, 2012 | 12:21 am
The Florida Board of Education voted to set different standards of reading and math achievement for students based on their race and ethnicity this month. There’s been controversy over the decision, which the Board is not budging on, but apparently the move was made in part because of No Child Left Behind. The ultimate goal is to get white, Asian, black and Latino students up to grade level achievement by 2023; the proposed achievement for each ethnic group is a gradient to get them there. … more

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