Mexican School Analysis

Words: 2010
Pages: 9

Although the American School system and the Mexican school system were similar in aspects like school and grade break down, there were many changes that Kenia was unprepared for her children to have to deal with. When they first moved to America, Erick was starting second grade, while Pamela was entering kindergarten. To start the school day off, they were already starting with a new cultural norm; the school bus. In Mexico, there is no public transportation that will get the kids to and from school, so this concept of putting your kids on a bus to school and not taking them directly to the school was an adjustment. It wasn’t just an adjustment for her, but her son Erick as well. Since Erick was in second grade at the time they move, he had …show more content…
Being in Japan with only one kid and at this point not many responsibilities, she has been able to have more free time in her daily routine. After she gets her son off to school she is able to clean the apartment that she lives in and lounge around for a while. Besides the Japanese classes she is able to take tennis classes and well as go into the city to meet her husband for lunch every day. The discrimination that she felt as a minority in America is not a characteristic of American only. In Japan it is less stereotyping like seen in America, but rather a dislike for all foreigners. Stereotyping is when there is an overgeneralized belief that a certain trait, behavior, or attitude characterizes all members of some identifiable group (Heffern, 2014). Kenia explained how there are some restaurant who will not serve her because they are concerned that she will not act within the cultural norms of the society. She has also found that Japanese women are much less inviting to her as compared to the Americans she met in her first few years. In Japan, she is in the process of building up a community with other immigrants. As sad is it is, she has been able to get used to this fact and structures her day around …show more content…
With little pieces of herself and her family members in Mexico and the United States she still finds herself concerned with current events in those countries. With her parents, siblings and in-laws still in Mexico, when a political or detrimental event occurs in Mexico she is still deeply affected. Her biggest concern in Mexico is how unsafe her city is becoming. With more and more tension building between the United States and Mexico, especially on the boarder, there have been more protests which lead to blocking of people from entering or exiting the country. These protests are setting up an unstable and dangerous environment in a town where her loved ones are, consequently making her