This study follows the literacy experiences of four Latina middle schoolers as they read Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird and compose home language narratives in their heritage voices. Both their vibrant ethnic cultures and other intersecting rays of identities are analyzed in the vein of their literate identities. Through analysis of their writing and speech, the girls present hybridized identities on the border between cultures and languages. Their position and identities in the social world of middle school are discussed and how transactions with literacy can dialogically influence those identities to enact critically conscious pedagogy
This dissertation is a an ethnographic study of Black and Latina/o youth communication at Willow Hig...
abstract: There are many educational issues connected to the exponential growth of the Latina/o popu...
Multilingual and multicultural students face the challenge of understanding where their ethnic ident...
Despite growing numbers of Latino/a youth within our nation and specifically within our K–12 populat...
This study was an action research study that examined how second grade bilingual children defined “t...
Latina/o students are the largest minority population in U.S. schools (Gándara, 2010), yet are prov...
Educators and policy makers have shown a consistent concern over the achievement gap. In academic as...
The qualitative case study investigated how a Latino bilingual teacher incorporated students' lingui...
Saavedra discusses how children in the borderlands can inform our language and literacy practices th...
This ethnographic study explored everyday lived experiences of a group of Latina women in school and...
This qualitative case study research looks at the intersections of identity, literacy, and achieveme...
Through single-case study research at a middle school site, students whose first language is Spanish...
This co-constructed narrative was undertaken to gain insights into youth perceptions about schooling...
Focusing on culturally sustaining literacy practices, I sought to conceptualize the integration of c...
This dissertation project represents a 2.5-year ethnographic study in a second-grade bilingual class...
This dissertation is a an ethnographic study of Black and Latina/o youth communication at Willow Hig...
abstract: There are many educational issues connected to the exponential growth of the Latina/o popu...
Multilingual and multicultural students face the challenge of understanding where their ethnic ident...
Despite growing numbers of Latino/a youth within our nation and specifically within our K–12 populat...
This study was an action research study that examined how second grade bilingual children defined “t...
Latina/o students are the largest minority population in U.S. schools (Gándara, 2010), yet are prov...
Educators and policy makers have shown a consistent concern over the achievement gap. In academic as...
The qualitative case study investigated how a Latino bilingual teacher incorporated students' lingui...
Saavedra discusses how children in the borderlands can inform our language and literacy practices th...
This ethnographic study explored everyday lived experiences of a group of Latina women in school and...
This qualitative case study research looks at the intersections of identity, literacy, and achieveme...
Through single-case study research at a middle school site, students whose first language is Spanish...
This co-constructed narrative was undertaken to gain insights into youth perceptions about schooling...
Focusing on culturally sustaining literacy practices, I sought to conceptualize the integration of c...
This dissertation project represents a 2.5-year ethnographic study in a second-grade bilingual class...
This dissertation is a an ethnographic study of Black and Latina/o youth communication at Willow Hig...
abstract: There are many educational issues connected to the exponential growth of the Latina/o popu...
Multilingual and multicultural students face the challenge of understanding where their ethnic ident...