Spanish Influence on American Culture

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The term Hispanic is one used in today's world as a description of the culture and people from all countries which were at one time under Spanish rule. In America the influence of Hispanic culture is evident. Hispanic culture affects certain things such as media, food, people, and in particular education. In certain states at least half of the population is full of Hispanics. With every passing day, the Hispanic population increases rapidly. Because of this Hispanics increase more and more jobs have become bilingual; schools have changed curriculum to meet the needs of Hispanic students, and the Spanish culture is being taught to American students. As the Hispanic population grows, the increase in changes of American education has grown as well.
Hispanic culture has had a profound effect on American education when it comes to diversity in schools. “Here are now approximately 10 million Hispanic students in the nation’s public kindergartens and its elementary and high schools; they make up about one-in-five public school students in the United States” (Fry 5). There is predicted to be a strong growth in Hispanic students, by 2050 bureau projects predicts that the Hispanic school-age population will increase by 166% (Gonzales 5). With the increase of Hispanics in America, there has been an increase of the graduating Hispanics in school “A record seven- in – ten (69%) A Hispanic high school graduates in the class of 2012” (Fry 5). There has been a 97.1% enrollment rate for Hispanics in America ranging from ages 5 through 7 in 2011 (Fry 5). For college there has been a 15.3% enrollment for Hispanics ages 18 through 24, and for ages 25 and up the enrollment rate is 2.1% (Fry 5). More than 21% of schoolchildren are Hispanic (Samuels ...

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6. Samuels, Robert. "With Hispanic Students on the Rise, Hispanic Teachers in Short Supply." Washington Post. The Washington Post, 16 Nov. 2011. Web. 04 May 2014. .
7. WIley, Terrence. "A “Languages for Jobs” Initiative." Council on Foreign Relations. Council on Foreign Relations, June 2012. Web. 04 May 2014. .
8. Ramos, Zuania. "U.S. Bilingual Education Challenge: Students Learning English As Second Language At Risk." The Huffington Post. TheHuffingtonPost.com, 14 Apr. 2013. Web. 04 May 2014. .

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