Adolescence
Volume 40, Issue 159, 2005, Pages 629-644

Acculturation models of immigrant Soviet adolescents in Israel (Review)

Shamai S.* , Ilatov Z.
  • a Tel Hai Academic College, Upper Galillee, Israel, Golan Research Institute, University of Haifa, Kazrin, Israel, Golan Research Institute, University of Haifa, P.O.B. 97, Kazrin, Israel
  • b Golan Research Institute, University of Haifa, P.O.B. 97, Kazrin, Israel

Abstract

This study probed acculturation in Israel of immigrant students from the former USSR from the perception of the host society and the students. The finding from a questionnaire distributed to Israeli-born and immigrant students indicated that most but not all of the Israel-born students applied an assimilatory model while the immigrants were split between those who accepted the Israeli students and those who resisted them. Thus, ethnic relation typologies and critical sociology of education concepts can explain only part of the immigrants' attitudes. It was found that both the host society and the immigrants have different attitudes toward the culture of the other, and thus use different acculturation strategies.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

Models, Psychological psychological model Israel psychological aspect human USSR Adaptation, Psychological ethnology student Humans attitude Adolescent male Acculturation preschool child Infant Child, Preschool female Review adaptive behavior questionnaire cultural factor Questionnaires adult migration Emigration and Immigration Students Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-27744609125&partnerID=40&md5=11943e96c0bca49a8ddb2f3cdb0ed6d0

ISSN: 00018449
Cited by: 8
Original Language: English