Concepts
History
Education
Cultural
Code-Switching
100

It means to move from one place to another, sometimes part of a back-and-forth pattern, and sometimes to stay.


a) immigrate  b) emigrate c) migrate d) none of the previous 

c) migrate

100

Immigration is a new phenomenon.



a) true   b) false

b) false

People have moved to new lands throughout history.

100

One out of every four children in the United States is an immigrant or the U.S.-born child of immigrants.


a) False  b) True

b) True

Even though one out of every four children in the United States is an immigrant or the U.S.-born child of immigrants, many schools are ill-equipped to meet their needs.

100

All children in the 21st century need to learn to cross cultural boundaries, whether ethnic, racial, age, geographic, or other boundaries.


a) False  b) True

b) True

Immigrant youth inevitably must navigate multiple cultures, and many schools and districts have yet to develop strategies for supporting this “cultural straddling".

100

It occurs when a speaker alternates between two or more languages, or language varieties, in the context of a single conversation or situation. 

a) Code-switching   b) Language alternation  c) All the previous

c) All the previous

Code-switching or language alternation occurs when a speaker alternates between two or more languages, or language varieties, in the context of a single conversation or situation.

200

It means you are exiting your current homeland.



a) immigrate  b) emigrate c) migrate d) none of the previous 

b) emigrate

200

In the 1800s, the Americas received the largest waves of immigration from Europe.



a) true   b) false

a) true 

In modern times, the largest waves of immigration were from Europe to the Americas in the 1800s. Millions of Europeans joined this movement, known as the Great Atlantic Migration.

200

Immigrant youth frequently do not learn two languages.


a) False  b) True

a) False

Immigrant youth frequently are learning two languages, an incredible asset, but one that many schools have yet to learn to support effectively.

200

Immigrant children face barriers because of their parents’ undocumented status.


a) False  b) True

b) True

Children face barriers because of their parents’ undocumented status, often related to poverty, fears of deportation, and so forth.

200

De acuerdo con lo estudiado en clases anteriores... do you believe that this question is a clear example of code-switching?


a) Yes!    b) Absolutely no!

a) Yes!


300

It is from the point of view of the destination 'come in'.



a) immigrate  b) emigrate c) migrate d) none of the previous 

a) immigrate

300

In the 1800s, Germans, Norwegians, Swedes, Irish, Italians, Greeks were settled in...

a) The U.S.A, Spain, and Argentina  

b) The U.S.A, Argentina and Australia

c) The U.S.A, Canada and South America

c) The U.S.A, Canada and South America

Many of these immigrants settled in Canada or South America. But most of them went to the United States.

300

Immigrant youth are best supported when schools foster bicultural identities.


a) False  b) True

 b) True

Related to bilingual language development, immigrant youth are best supported when schools foster bicultural identities, enabling them to navigate multiple cultural worlds effectively.

300

It represents the number of all immigrant youth.


a) one-third  b) one-quarter c) one-sixth

a) one-third 

Undocumented status affects more than 1 million children today, which is about one-third of all immigrant youth.

300

Is it the same 'Code-Switching' and 'Code-Mixing'?



a) Yes!    b) No!

 b) No!

Code mixing is when someone uses one word or phrase from one language to another language. And code switching is when the language is arranged structurally and grammatically in other language.



400

It means you are coming in to a country to live.



a) immigrate  b) emigrate c) migrate d) none of the previous 

a) immigrate

400

It had been built by immigrants, starting with the first Europeans in the 1600s.


a) The U.S.A  b) The Republic of China  c) The URSS 

a) The U.S.A  

The United States had been built by immigrants, starting with the first Europeans who moved onto Native American lands in the 1600s.

400

Immigrant youth bring rich, diverse cultural backgrounds to the classroom and expose their peers and teachers to different ways of understanding the world.


a) False  b) True

b) True

Immigrant youth force teachers to develop strategies that employ multiple forms of communication, and to think beyond the United States in the curriculum, from social studies lessons to examples used in math word problems. 

400

Is it important that teachers are interested in improving their cultural competencies?


a) yes      b) no

Why?

The cultural competency is essential in any educational setting since it requires, first and foremost, that teachers see themselves as lifelong learners who will inevitably encounter new cultures in the classroom, whether immigrant, racial, technological, stylistic, and more.

400

Can we use 'Code-Switching' to show solidarity?


a) Yes, we can!    b) No, we can't!

Why?

a) Yes, we can!

Code-switching is also common to express solidarity. When an individual wishes to show unity in a particular social group, code-switching helps connect with more people of the same dialect.

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