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Hispanic Kids Could Be Majority By
2023
WASHINGTON (AP) March 5, 2009
―
Roughly one-fourth of the children
in U.S. kindergartens are Hispanic,
evidence of an accelerating trend
that now will see minority children
become the majority by 2023.
Census data released Thursday also
show Hispanics make up about
one-fifth of all K-12 pupils, those
in kindergarten through 12th grade.
Schools in most U.S. states have 12
grades. Hispanics' growth and
changes in the youth population are
certain to influence political
debate for years about jobs,
immigration and education.
The ethnic shifts in school
enrollment are most evident in the
American West. States such as
Arizona, California and Nevada are
seeing an influx of Hispanics due to
both immigration and higher birth
rates than other ethnic groups.
Minority students in that region
exceed non-Hispanic whites at the
pre-college grade levels, with about
37 percent of the students Hispanic.
Hispanics comprise 54 percent of
students in New Mexico, 47 percent
in California, 44 percent in Texas
and 40 percent in Arizona.
In 2007, more than 40 percent of all
students in K-12 were minorities -
Hispanics, blacks, Asian-Americans
and others. That is double the
percentage of three decades ago.
In colleges, Hispanics constitute 12
percent of full-time undergraduate
and graduate students, 2 percent
more than in 2006. Still, that is
short of Hispanics' 15 percent
representation in the total U.S.
population.
"The future of our education system
depends on how we can advance
Hispanics through the ranks," said
William Frey, a demographer at the
Brookings Institution in Washington.
"In many cases it's going to be a
challenge, because they are the
children of immigrants, and their
English is not as strong. Many have
parents without a high school or
college education."
Minorities are projected to become
the majority of the overall U.S.
population by 2042. For minority
children, that shift is seen coming
in 2023, seven years earlier than
was estimated as recently as 2004.
The accelerated timetable is due to
immigration among Hispanics and
Asians, and declining birth rates
among non-Hispanic whites.
Hispanics account for more than 23
percent of kindergartners in private
and public schools, according to
2007 data. That is more than triple
Hispanics' percentage in the 1970s,
the height of white baby boom
enrollment in elementary and high
school.
More Hispanic kindergartners in 2007
were U.S.-born than foreign-born,
assuring them of citizenship that
will make them eligible to vote by
2020.
The future of our education system
depends on how we can advance
Hispanics through the ranks.
Power at the polls
Richard Fry, a senior researcher at the
Pew Hispanic Center, said Hispanic
growth cannot be ignored in policy
debates for too long. While in recent
elections Hispanics have only cast 6
percent of the total ballots, "Latinos'
electoral power and participation levels
clearly are going to grow," he said.
William Frey said, "The changing
demographics offer opportunity and
political risks for President Obama, the
nation's first African-American leader,
and emerging Republicans such as
37-year-old Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal,
the first Indian-American elected to
statewide office."
Mr. Obama, who took two-thirds of the
Hispanic vote, is channeling billions of
federal dollars to improve schools,
reduce the dropout rate and make college
more affordable by increasing the
maximum Pell Grant, a federal subsidy
for low-income students, to $5,550.
Yet his administration has been sketchy
when it comes to improving classroom
performance and overhauling the former
Bush administration's No Child Left
Behind Act. It sets goals for schools
that are supposed to have every student
reading and doing math at grade level by
2014.
The education law has major implications
for both black and Hispanic students,
including those who speak English as a
second language, because they tend to
lag behind whites in reading and math
scores.
Obama has been largely quiet on
immigration reform, which could pave the
way for citizenship for nearly 12
million illegal immigrants.
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