This paper is a critical reflection on the author’s educational experience as a Hmong woman. The author draws on feminist theories, and intertwines the Hmong culture and US education. The paper begins with an introduction about the author’s US-centric perspectives she had about her Hmong community. Her narrative focuses on how these perspectives influenced her interpretations of the events that took place surrounding her decision to attend college away from home. To unpack this experience, the author focused on a need to understand Hmong culture and gendered ideologies by deconstructing her then-western-perspective of why her relatives discouraged her. Through this process, she discusses the complex influences of education and culture. Alth...
In “Rewriting Hmong Womanhood,” I argue that the revision of cultural gender roles for migrant women...
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Minnesota, in partial ...
I conducted this study to examine Hmong American college students\u27 perspectives on sense of belon...
This study highlights the various identities of a Hmong American woman in graduate education by deco...
Research on the educational achievement of racialized minorities and immigrants have largely discuss...
“Assimilation” is used to describe how immigrants adapt and integrate into the culture and society o...
In this dissertation, I examined the educational and life experiences of 13 first-generation Hmong w...
This impact essay examines the intersection of race, ethnicity, and gender as a first-generation Hmo...
As the changing demographics in the United States are steadily shifting the student populations in c...
Today young Hmong women growing in the United States face a future that is\ud very different from th...
First-generation college students’ (FGCS) experience in college is unique. Hmong Americans are pursu...
From Central Asia surviving great battles, war, migrating to the mountains of\ud Laos and resettleme...
The educational trends in the attainment of Hmong American students in higher education have grown s...
Hmong people have been living in the United States for over four decades, primarily in the States of...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2014. Major: Education, Curriculum and Instruc...
In “Rewriting Hmong Womanhood,” I argue that the revision of cultural gender roles for migrant women...
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Minnesota, in partial ...
I conducted this study to examine Hmong American college students\u27 perspectives on sense of belon...
This study highlights the various identities of a Hmong American woman in graduate education by deco...
Research on the educational achievement of racialized minorities and immigrants have largely discuss...
“Assimilation” is used to describe how immigrants adapt and integrate into the culture and society o...
In this dissertation, I examined the educational and life experiences of 13 first-generation Hmong w...
This impact essay examines the intersection of race, ethnicity, and gender as a first-generation Hmo...
As the changing demographics in the United States are steadily shifting the student populations in c...
Today young Hmong women growing in the United States face a future that is\ud very different from th...
First-generation college students’ (FGCS) experience in college is unique. Hmong Americans are pursu...
From Central Asia surviving great battles, war, migrating to the mountains of\ud Laos and resettleme...
The educational trends in the attainment of Hmong American students in higher education have grown s...
Hmong people have been living in the United States for over four decades, primarily in the States of...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2014. Major: Education, Curriculum and Instruc...
In “Rewriting Hmong Womanhood,” I argue that the revision of cultural gender roles for migrant women...
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Minnesota, in partial ...
I conducted this study to examine Hmong American college students\u27 perspectives on sense of belon...