Lived Experiences of Women of Color in Education

Authors

  • Noni Mendoza-Reis San Joe State University
  • Rosalinda Quintanar-Sarellana San Jose State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18733/cpi29534

Abstract

By building upon previous research of women of color in academia, this article focuses on the lived experiences and narratives of two faculty members. Their stories are presented as case studies which explicate the distinct difference between reading and researching poverty and having experiential knowledge of this circumstance. The first narrative presents a scholar from a farmworker background who understands and has lived in poverty. Because of this background, she is able to apply her own community cultural wealth to her work in education. The second narrative depicts a scholar with a rich academic background that did not have the opportunity to engage fully with her research agenda. Her life in academia was very rich and she was able to help many students, schools and communities. However, she was forced to set aside her dreams of conducting in depth research of the issues confronted by her underserved community.

Author Biographies

Noni Mendoza-Reis, San Joe State University

Noni Mendoza-Reis is Professor Emerita in the Department of Educational Leadership at San Jose State University. Her research and scholarship are focused of (a) social justice approaches to leadership preparation, (b) effective education for English Learners, and (c) women of color in leadership. She has published in various journals and has book chapters in the Handbook of research on educational leadership for diversity and equity, as well as in the book, U.S. Latinos in K-12 education: Seminal research-based directions for change we can believe in.

Rosalinda Quintanar-Sarellana, San Jose State University

Rosalinda Quintanar-Sarellana graduated from Stanford University with a PhD in the area of Literacy, Language and Culture, and a Masters in the area of International Development in Education. Presently she is a full professor at San Jose State University where she teaches First and Second Language Acquisition, Sociology of Education and Multicultural Education.

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Published

2021-08-27

Issue

Section

Post Colonial Articles, Poetry, Artwork