Remade in America
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작성자 관리자 작성일작성일 09-03-12 수정일수정일 70-01-01 조회9,635회관련링크
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Diversity in the Classroom
Immigration’s impact is often first seen in the classroom. The increasing diversity of the nation’s education system is the most detailed measure of where immigrants have settled in recent years. View demographic changes in more than 17,000 school districts across the nation — including your own.
- Explore the map of US immigration trends
- Join a discussion about immigration and education
United States
Fueled by the latest wave of immigration, enrollment of Hispanic and Asian students in American schools has increased by more than 5 million since the 1990s. The increases are occurring not just in long-time immigration hotbeds, but in places as far flung as Sevier County, Arkansas to Colfax County, Nebraska, to Marion County, Oregon.
Students, in 2006 | 48,504,876 | |
---|---|---|
White | 27,394,435 | 56% |
Black | 8,288,264 | 17% |
Hispanic | 9,950,245 | 21% |
Asian | 2,282,149 | 5% |
Native American | 589,783 | 1% |
In 2006 | 61% |
In 1993 | 52% |
Student Demographics
United States
White
Black
Hispanic
Asian
Nat. Amer.
Most-Diverse States
Most-Diverse Districts
- Tukwila School District 406 (Washington)
- Natomas Unified (California)
- Alameda County Office Of Education (California)
- Sacramento City Unified (California)
- John Swett Unified (California)
,2009/03/11
Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics