English fluency of the US immigrants: Assimilation effects, cohort variations, and periodical changes

Type Journal Article - Social science research
Title English fluency of the US immigrants: Assimilation effects, cohort variations, and periodical changes
Author(s)
Volume 42
Issue 4
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 1109-1121
URL https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Juan_Xi/publication/236963522_English_Fluency_of_the_U.S._Immig​rants_Assimilation_Effects_Cohort_Variations_and_Periodical_Changes/links/541c3a350cf2218008c50162.p​df
Abstract
Using 1% Public-Use Microdata Samples (PUMSs) of the 1980, 1990, and 2000 census and
the 2010 American Community Survey (ACS), this study evaluates three simultaneous longitudinal
trends in immigrants’ English fluency: the assimilation process, variations across
arrival cohorts, and periodical changes. The key findings include that the declining initial
English fluency among new immigrants reported in a previous study based on 1980 and
1990 data (Carliner, 2000) was reversed in the 1990s and 2000s. Immigrants who arrived
during the 2000s have the highest level of English fluency at the year of entry among all
cohorts. Immigrants are assimilating. However, changes in social and linguistic environment
in the US during the past two decades have suppressed the advancement of immigrants.
The decline in the average English attainment from the 1980s to the 1990s
reported in a previous study (Pitkin and Myers, 2011) was found to extend to the 2000s.
Using new census data, this study updated the current knowledge on immigrants’ English
fluency by revealing a never documented upward trend among recent immigrants and suppressive
period effects from 1990 to 2010.

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