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UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center University of California, Davis May 27 th ,2015

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Page 1: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty,

Staff, and Undocumented Students

AB540 & Undocumented Student CenterUniversity of California, Davis

May 27th,2015

Page 2: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Facilitators

Andrea Gaytan, Director, AB540 and Undocumented

Student Center

Marcus Tang, Attorney/Legal Fellow, UC Davis Immigration

Law Clinic

Vanessa Segundo, Education and Training Coordinator,

AB540 and Undocumented Student Center

Page 3: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Overview• History of the UndocuAlly Program for Educators

• Terminology and Data

• Laws and Policies

• Experiences and Challenges

• Best Practices

Page 4: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• The UndocuAlly Program for Educators (UPE), open to UC Davis faculty, staff, and graduate/professional students. • UndocuAlly is a term used to identify campus allies for

undocumented students.

• Goal: Assist educators in developing and enhancing their working knowledge regarding servicing undocumented student populations at UC Davis.

History and Vision

Page 5: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• During fall 2014 quarter, two focus groups were held in which 35 faculty, staff, and graduate students participated• Feedback was provided in two ways: individual

responses, group dialogue, and written group responses.

History: Our Process

Page 6: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• The majority of definitions provided by participants that defined an undocumented student revolved within legal and political contexts• All responses provided by participants indicated negative

associations between experiences and challenges undocumented students face regarding, living a “life of secrecy.”

Source: AB540 & Undocumented Student Center http://undocumented.ucdavis.edu/education/FocusGroupReport2014.pdf

History: Educator Perspectives

Page 7: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• The responses that activated lively dialogue was provided by participants was regarding privilege, race, and positionality. • “‘Where are you from?’ Having to face that several times a

day, means you don’t fit here. You don’t fit into the cookie cutter Davis. The intent may not be malice, but the impact is making a student feel unwelcome.”

History: Educator Perspectives

Page 8: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• Participants agreed that they felt a sense of helplessness for not being well versed in legal terminology and policies. They stated that the majority of the time, the student knows more than they do in relation to navigating campus resources. • “The student will be the expert, having gone through all the

campus departments, but the stress of having to teach me causes more stress.”

History: Educator Perspectives

Page 9: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Focus Areas Goals• Laws and policies affecting

undocumented students• Statistics regarding the undocumented

student population at UC Davis• Mental health concerns experienced by

undocumented students• Undocumented student narratives

• Articulate experiences and challenges of undocumented students

• Become familiar with federal and state legislation that affects undocumented students

• Identify and make a commitment to use immigrant sensitive language

• Personalize best practices and interventions

History: Learning Objectives

Page 10: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

UndocuAlly Progam for Educators

Page 11: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• An undocumented individual is a non-citizen living in the U.S. without authorization, in the form of valid immigration status, from the federal government.• (1) entered without inspection, or • (2) entered with a valid visa or other status, and overstayed the

authorized duration of that status

Defining “Undocumented”

Page 12: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Generally, undocumented individuals:• Face imminent threat of detention and/or deportation• Do not have permission to work• Cannot leave the United States and return• Cannot obtain Social Security numbers• Cannot obtain driver licenses in most states• Are ineligible for most public benefits

Defining “Undocumented”

Page 13: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

How would using the ‘i’ word make a student feel?

How would the use of this term impact your ability to provide services to students?

The “I” Word

Page 14: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• 200-250K undocumented students enrolled in college

• 10% of undocumented 16-24 year olds go on to college• compared to 25-30% of the total population

• Most go on to 2 year colleges

M. H. Lopez, Director of Hispanic Research, Pew Center, personal communication, Washington, DC, February 7, 2014. As noted in: In the Shadows of the Ivory Tower: Undocumented Undergraduates and the Liminal State of Immigration Reform.

National Estimates

Page 15: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Undocumented Students at the U.C.

Predominantly Asian and Latino

Low income (97% received financial aid in AY13-14)

Over 2,000 students across all 9 campuses

Including medical, law, and professional/graduate school

Admissions criteria does not change

Page 16: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

UC Davis GrowthAt UC Davis: Academic Year # of Students benefitting from

CA DREAM Act

12-13 78

13-14 184

14-15 273

Data as of January 2015 provided by UC Davis Financial Aid

Page 17: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Laws and Policies Affecting Undocumented Students

Page 18: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Legal Information vs. Legal AdviceTrue or FalseLegal information involves educating a person about what the law is.

Legal advice involves making determinations or recommendations based on analysis of the law as it applies to a person’s specific situation.

Anyone can give legal advice.FALSE!

TRUE!

TRUE!

Page 19: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Legal Information vs. Legal Advice

When in doubt, refer the student to consult with an attorney.

Page 20: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Race and Immigration Policy

Key developments in federal immigration law inform how we understand the marginalized experiences of undocumented students of color.

1882Chinese

Exclusion Acts

1924National

Origins Quota System

1965Immigration Act of 1965

1996Welfare

Reform Act of 1996

2013Comprehensive Immigration

Reform*

Page 21: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Overview of Laws and PoliciesFederal• Process for Obtaining a Green Card• Comprehensive Immigration Reform• Proposed legislation!

• Deferred Action (DACA & DAPA)• The Constitutional Right to Free K-12 Education

State• In-State Tuition at Public Universities• State-Based Financial Aid• Professional Licenses• Driver Licenses

Page 22: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Federal Laws and Policies

Page 23: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center
Page 24: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Comprehensive Immigration Reform

• Would provide a pathway to citizenship for the majority of undocumented individuals living in the United States.

• Includes the Federal DREAM Act

Page 25: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

What is deferred action?

• Deferred action is a use of prosecutorial discretion by immigration authorities to suspend deportation proceedings for a certain period of time.

Page 26: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• Born after June 15, 1981• Arrival before 16th birthday• Qualifying education or military status• Continuous residence since June 15, 2007• No severe criminal history

Eligibility

• Temporary protection from deportation• Permission to work• Social Security Number• CA Driver’s License / CA I.D. Card• Medi-Cal (if otherwise eligible)• Possible to travel abroad

Benefits

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals

Page 27: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Deferred Action for Parents of American Citizens and Lawful Permanent Residents*

• Parent of a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident• Continuous residence since January 1, 2010• Are not an “enforcement priority” (no severe

criminal history)Eligibility

• Temporary protection from deportation• Permission to work• TBA…

Benefits* Pending federal litigation

Page 28: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

What Deferred Action is NOT:

• Permanent• Guaranteed• A law• Legal immigration status• A pathway to lawful permanent resident status or

U.S. citizenship

Page 29: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

The Constitutional Right to Free K-12 Education

U.S. Supreme Court has held that undocumented children are entitled to the same K-12 free, public education system that the state provides to children who are citizens or LPRs.• Plyler v. Doe (1982)

Page 30: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Immigration Status: A Spectrum

Undocumented

Undocumented with DACA

Nonimmigrant Visa (i.e.

Student visa)

Lawful Permanent Residence/ Green Card

U.S. Citizenship

Stronger rights and benefits

Weaker rights and benefits

Page 31: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Rights & Benefits of U.S. Citizens

• Permission to work• Eligibility for federal financial aid• Free, public K-12 education• Can leave the U.S. and return

• Without time restrictions• Can petition certain family members to immigrate

• Including immediate relatives without much delay• Eligibility for public assistance

• Without waiting periods• Authorization to be in the U.S.

• Permanently• Not subject to potential detention and/or deportation by ICE

• Can vote in U.S. elections and serve on juries

Page 32: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Rights & Benefits of Lawful Permanent Residents

• Permission to work• Eligibility for federal financial aid• Free, public K-12 education• Can leave the U.S. and return

• Without time restrictions• Can petition certain family members to immigrate

• Including immediate relatives without much delay• Eligibility for public assistance

• Without waiting periods• Authorization to be in the U.S.

• Permanently• Not subject to potential detention and/or deportation by ICE

• Can vote in U.S. elections and serve on juries• Pathway to citizenship

Page 33: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Rights & Benefits of Student Visa Holders

• Permission to work (with limitations)• Eligibility for federal financial aid• Free, public K-12 education• Can leave the U.S. and return

• Without time restrictions• Can petition certain family members to immigrate

• Including immediate relatives without much delay• Eligibility for public assistance

• Without waiting periods• Authorization to be in the U.S.

• Permanently• Not subject to potential detention and/or deportation by ICE

• Can vote in U.S. elections and serve on juries• Pathway to citizenship

Page 34: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Rights & Benefits of Undocumented Immigrants

• Permission to work• Eligibility for federal financial aid• Free, public K-12 education• Can leave the U.S. and return

• Without time restrictions• Can petition certain family members to immigrate

• Including immediate relatives without much delay• Eligibility for most forms of public assistance

• Without waiting periods• Authorization to be in the U.S.

• Permanently• Not subject to potential detention and/or deportation by ICE

• Can vote in U.S. elections and serve on juries• Pathway to citizenship

Page 35: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Rights & Benefits of DACA Recipients

• Permission to work• Eligibility for federal financial aid• Free, public K-12 education• Can leave the U.S. and return (for limited purposes)

• Without time restrictions• Can petition certain family members to immigrate

• Including immediate relatives without much delay• Eligibility for most forms of public assistance

• Without waiting periods• Authorization to be in the U.S. (but still without immigration status)

• Permanently• Not subject to potential detention and/or deportation by ICE

• Can vote in U.S. elections and serve on juries• Pathway to citizenship

Page 36: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

State Laws and Policies

Page 37: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

The Challenge of Paying for Higher Education

• Undocumented students:• No automatic in-state tuition• Ineligible for federal financial aid.• No work authorization*

*Unless student qualifies for DACA/DAPA

Page 38: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Nationwide Overview of Access to Higher Education

Source: Americas Quarterly (http://www.americasquarterly.org/dreamers-access-higher-education)

Page 39: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Spotlight: California AB 540• California law that allows a qualifying student who would

otherwise not be eligible for in-state tuition to pay in-state tuition fees at any UC, CSU, or CA community college.• Eligibility Requirements:• Attended a CA high school for 3+ full academic years• Graduated from a CA high school, attained a G.E.D., or

passed the CA High School Proficiency Exam• In addition to other requirements

Page 40: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

How Do CA Students Identify?“Undocumented Student” vs. “AB 540 Student” vs. “DACAmented Student”:

Undocumented Students (“Dreamers”)

DACA Students(“DACAmented”)AB 540

Students

Page 41: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Professional Licenses• Florida: New law enacted in 2014 allows undocumented immigrants

with a Florida law degree to apply for admission as attorneys to the Florida State Bar Association (HB 755).

• California: New law enacted in 2015 allows undocumented immigrants to apply for professional licenses in the state (SB 1159).

Page 42: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Nationwide Overview of Driver Licenses

Source: National Immigration Law Center

Page 43: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Education Non-Education

• In-state tuition for undocumented students

• State-based educational financial aid• Eligibility for need-based

grants and institutional scholarships

• State-based loans• Professional licenses for

undocumented individuals

• Driver Licenses• Access to state-based public

assistance• Access to healthcare

programs• Access to state-funded legal

assistance• Prohibitions on cooperation

between state/local law enforcement agencies and federal immigration authorities

“Best Practices” in State Immigration Policy

Page 44: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Experiences and Challenges

Page 45: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Challenges

• Financial Aid/Financial Services• Psycho-social stress/anxiety• Driver’s License (DACA/AB60 as of 2015)• Vulnerability: Deportation, exploitation, violence• Internships/work experience• Post-graduation unknown• Medical care & Housing• Navigating systems

Page 46: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

4 Corners

Page 47: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Which area do you feel most

comfortable navigating for

yourself?

Page 48: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

In your opinion, which area is the biggest challenge for an undocumented

student?

Page 49: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Which area do you as an ally need to learn

more about?

Page 50: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Best Practices

Page 51: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Knowledgeable vs Misinformed

Advise vs Decide

Support vs ExpertiseHuman vs Subject

Best Practices: Framework for Allyship

Page 52: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Check your privilege

acknowledge; leveraging vs. stepping back

deficit vs. asset frameworks

build trust, rapport, credibility

Best Practices: Individual Level

Page 53: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

• “Can’t fill out FAFSA”• “Can’t drive” • “Can’t study abroad/ leave the US ”• “Can’t work” •“I don’t have an SSN” • Any others?

What are some cues/invitations?

Page 54: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Assess your environment, personnel, and resources• Revisit institutional mission and

values• Proactive vs. reactive counseling

staff• Parental/familial involvement• Establish and streamline referral

process for services

Establish the organization as a resource• Invite/organize community

functions• Develop a school guide!

(multiple languages)• Build alumni network• Develop college pathways

Hold your organization accountable• Visible and continued support for

undocumented students• On-going professional development• Partner with community

organizations• Follow through and follow up

Best Practices: Organizational Level

Page 55: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

•UC Davis Undocumented Student Support • http://undocumented.ucdavis.edu

• University of California—All topics• http://undoc.universityofcalifornia.edu/applying-to-uc.html

• Educators for Fair Consideration (E4FC)• e4fc.org

• University of California Admissions• http://admission.universityofcalifornia.edu/paying-for-uc/whats-available/ca-drea

m-act/

Websites to Reference

Page 56: UndocuAlly Program for Educators: Developing Effective Partnerships between Faculty, Staff, and Undocumented Students AB540 & Undocumented Student Center

Andrea GaytanAB540 & Undocumented Student Center(530)[email protected]

Marcus TangUC Davis Immigration Law Clinic(530) [email protected]

Vanessa SegundoAB540 & Undocumented Student Center(530)[email protected]

Contact Us