Latinx and education: Recent print books
This guide is for those interested in issues surrounding Latinx and education, both research and practice, including Latinos and Latinas.
Recent print books
Teaching and learning in the new Latino diaspora: creating culturally responsive practice by Edmund T. Hamann (Ed.); Sofia A. Villenas (Foreword); Socorro G. Herrera (Ed.); Enrique G. Murillo (Ed.); Stanton Wortham (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2024This volume does more than document an educational dynamic that impacts Latino populations across the United States; it also connects educational challenges to concrete plans for how those problems can be resolved. Both experienced and new scholars describe strategies and outline policies to support academic success, affirm identity and belonging, and show how educational institutions can be transformed to better serve Latino constituencies in a post-pandemic world, where insistent efforts at right of belonging and affirmation counter Trumpian xenophobia and hostility.Hispanic leadership in higher education by Elsa Villarreal (Ed.); José Parra (Ed.); Melissa Arrambide (Ed.); LaVelle Hendricks (Ed.); Dimitra Smith (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2025In the landscape of higher education, a persistent gap exists, casting shadows on the full potential of Hispanic professionals to rise as leaders. The complexities of their journey, from faculty to administrative roles, remain enshrouded, impeding progress toward greater representation and impact. Hispanic Leadership in Higher Education is an illuminating book with research that is poised to shatter these barriers.Latinx studies curriculum in K-12 schools: a practical guide by David Colón; Max Krochmal; Jacinto Ramos (Foreword); Jacinto Ramos (Foreword)
Publication Date: 2022Created by an interdisciplinary team of researchers in partnership with a large urban school district, this guidebook helps teachers and school leaders in Texas and beyond learn how to overlay Latina/o/x Studies content on top of existing state standards, providing a practical roadmap toward historically accurate, culturally relevant curricula and instruction that can be injected into all K-12 social studies classes.Good boys, bad hombres: the racial politics of mentoring Latino boys in schools by Michael V. Singh
Publication Date: 2024Educational research has long documented the politics of punishment for boys and young men of color in schools--but what about the politics of empowerment and inclusion? In Good Boys, Bad Hombres, Michael V. Singh focuses on this aspect of youth control in schools, asking on whose terms a positive Latino manhood gets to be envisioned. Based on two years of ethnographic research in an urban school district in California, Good Boys, Bad Hombres examines Latino Male Success, a school-based mentorship program for Latino boys.Knowing silence: how children talk about immigration status in school by Ariana Mangual Figueroa
Publication Date: 2024There is a persistent assumption in the field of education that children are largely unaware of their immigration status and its implications. In Knowing Silence, Ariana Mangual Figueroa challenges this "myth of ignorance." By listening carefully to both the speech and significant silences of six Latina students from mixed-immigration-status families, from elementary school into middle school and beyond, she reveals the complex ways young people understand and negotiate immigration status and its impact on their lives."We want better education!": the 1960s Chicano student movement, school walkouts, and the quest for educational reform in South Texas by James Barrera
Publication Date: 2024In "We Want Better Education!", James B. Barrera offers a detailed and comprehensive analysis of the educational, cultural, and political issues of the Chicano Movement in Texas, which remains one of the lesser-known social and political efforts of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. This movement became the political training ground for greater Chicano empowerment for students. By the 1970s, it was these students who helped to organize La Raza Unida Party in Texas.Desert dreams: Mexican Arizona and the politics of educational equality by Laura K. Muñoz
Publication Date: 2024Desert Dreams chronicles seventy-five years of Mexican American efforts to attain educational equality in Arizona, from its territorial period in the nineteenth century to the post-World War II era. Laura K. Muñoz reveals how Arizona Mexicans, or Arizonenses, embraced the United States expecting that they would be treated as American citizens. Instead, Anglo Arizonans wrote laws and designed schools to transform Mexicans from "unassimilable immigrants" into "American workers" by restricting their education to the acquisition of fluency in English and mastery of basic domestic and industrial skills.The Latinx guide to graduate school by Genevieve Negrón-Gonzales; Magdalena L. Barrera
Publication Date: 2023In The Latinx Guide to Graduate School Genevieve Negrón-Gonzales and Magdalena L. Barrera provide prospective and current Latinx graduate students in the humanities and social sciences fields with a roadmap for surviving and thriving in advanced-degree programs. They document the unwritten rules of graduate education that impact Latinx students, demystifying and clarifying the essential requirements for navigating graduate school that Latinx students may not know because they are often the first in their families to walk that path.The Latinization of indigenous students : erasing identity and restricting opportunity at school by Rebecca A. Campbell-Montalvo
Publication Date: 2023Based upon research in rural central Florida, The Latinization of Indigenous Students examines how schools perceive and process demographic information, including how those perceptions may erase Indigeneity and impact resource access. Based on multiyear fieldwork, Campbell-Montalvo argues that languages and racial identities of Indigenous Latinx students and families may be re-formed by schools, erasing Indigeneity.
2022
Community as rebellion: a syllabus for surviving academia as a woman of color by Lorgia Garcia Pena
Publication Date: 2022Weaving personal narrative with political analysis, Community as Rebellion offers a meditation on creating liberatory spaces for students and faculty of color within academia. Much like other women scholars of color, Lorgia García Peña has struggled against the colonizing, racializing, classist, and unequal structures that perpetuate systemic violence within universities. Through personal experiences and analytical reflections, the author invites readers--in particular Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and Asian women--to engage in liberatory practices of boycott, abolition, and radical community-building to combat the academic world's tokenizing and exploitative structures.The dawning of diversity: how Chicanos helped change Stanford University by Frank Sotomayor; Barbara Sotomayor
Publication Date: 2022This is a story about transformational change: How Stanford was pressured to pivot from a virtually all-White student body to a university with growing numbers of students of color. This largely untold story focuses on Mexican Americans - or Chicanos as they preferred to be called. It is chronicled not only through events and actions but also through the students' recollections of angst and joy, challenges and rewards, distress and romance, struggles to achieve goals and dreams that came true.Deculturalization and the struggle for equality: a brief history of the education of dominated cultures in the United States by Joel H. Spring
Publication Date: 2022"Joel Springs history of school policies imposed on dominated groups in the United States examines the concept of deculturalization-the use of schools to strip away family languages and cultures and replace them with those of the dominant group. The focus is on the education of dominated groups forced to become citizens in territories conquered by the U.S., including Native Americans, African Americans, Asian Americans, Latino Americans, and Hawaiians."Latina/o/x education in Chicago: roots, resistance, and transformation by Isaura Pulido (Ed.); Angelica Rivera (Ed.); Ann M. Aviles (Ed.); Jaime Alanís; Ann M. Avilés; Gabriel Alejandro Cortez; Erica R. Dávila; Lilia Fernandez; Nilda Flores-González; Cristina Pacione-Zayas; Arlene Torres; Mirelsie Velázquez; Leticia Villarreal Sosa
Publication Date: 2022In this collection, local experts use personal narratives and empirical data to explore the history of Mexican American and Puerto Rican education in the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) system. The essays focus on three themes: the historical context of segregated and inferior schooling for Latina/o/x students; the changing purposes and meanings of education for Latina/o/x students from the 1950s through today; and Latina/o/x resistance to educational reforms grounded in neoliberalism.Living, learning, and languaging across borders: students between the US and Mexico by Tatyana Kleyn ; photography by Tim Porter
Publication Date: 2022Addressing the roles of education, language, and identity in cyclical migration, this book highlights the voices and experiences of transborder students in Mexico who were born or raised in the US. The stories develop a portrait of the lived realities, joys, and challenges that young people face across elementary, secondary, and tertiary levels.Puerto Rican Chicago: schooling the city, 1940-1977 by Mirelsie Velazquez
Publication Date: 2022The postwar migration of Puerto Rican men and women to Chicago brought thousands of their children into city schools. These children's classroom experience continued the colonial project begun in their homeland, where American ideologies had dominated Puerto Rican education since the island became a US territory. Mirelsie Velázquez tells how Chicago's Puerto Ricans pursued their educational needs in a society that constantly reminded them of their status as second-class citizens.Struggling to find our way: rural educators' experiences working with and caring for Latinx students by Stephanie Oudghiri
Publication Date: 2022The purpose of this year-long, school-based narrative inquiry was to examine the beliefs, attitudes, and practices of rural educators as they described their work with Latinx immigrant, elementary students, negotiated the "space" between a professional and personal identity and demonstrated an ethic of care.Transformative translanguaging espacios: Latinx students and their teachers rompiendo fronteras sin miedoTransformative Translanguaging Espacios by Maite T. Sánchez (Ed.); Ofelia García (Ed.)
Publication Date: 2022This book contributes to the understanding of the transformative power of incorporating translanguaging, the dynamic language practices of bi/multilingual communities, in the schooling of US Latinx children and youth. It showcases instructional spaces in US education where Latinx children's and youths' translanguaging is at the center of their teaching and learning. By centering racialized Latinx bilingual students, including their knowledge systems and cultural and linguistic practices, it transforms the monolingual-white supremacy ideology of many educational spaces.
2021
(M)othering labeled children: bilingualism and disability in the lives of Latinx mothers by María Cioè-Peña
Publication Date: 2021This book takes a distinctive approach to exploring the experiences and identities of minoritized Latinx mothers who are raising a child who is labeled as both an emergent bilingual and dis/abled. It showcases relationships between families and schools and reveals the myriad of ways in which school-based decisions regarding disability, language and academic placement impact family dynamics.Educating newcomers: K-12 public schooling for undocumented and asylum-seeking children in the United States by Shelly Culbertson; Julia H. Kaufman; Jenna W. Kramer; Brian Phillips
Publication Date: 2021By U.S. law, states must provide education to all children, regardless of immigration status. But policymakers lack information needed to support the education of undocumented and asylum-seeking children, whose numbers have been growing. This report models the numbers of such children by state, reviews the federal and state policy landscapes for their education, and provides case studies of how schools are managing education for them.The kindness of color: the story of two families and Mendez, et al. v. Westminster, the 1947 desegregation of California public schools by Janice Munemitsu; Sylvia Mendez (Foreword)
Publication Date: 2021The Kindness of Color follows two immigrant families facing separate battles with racism in WWII-era Southern California. Unexpectedly, their paths intertwine, ultimately paving the way for the landmark court case Mendez, et. al v. Westminster and the desegregation of California public schools seven years before Brown v. Board of Education. In the face of tremendous discrimination, the Mendez and Munemitsu families are sustained by the simple yet harrowing acts of kindness extended to them by friends and strangers as they navigate their difficult journeys toward justice.Latinx Experiences in U. S. Schools by Margarita Jiménez-Silva (Ed.); Janine Bempechat (Ed); Joey Luevanos; Evelyn Baca; Jenny Jacobs; Orlando Carreon; Melody Esqueda; Laura Gomez; Ruth Luevanos; Christine Montecillo Leider; Megan Schantz; Molly Ross; Kenny Varner; Ofelia Schepers; Eleanora Villegas-Reimers; Jaclyn Caires-Hurley; Anne Ittner; Andrea Emerson; Nadeen Ruiz; Samantha Smith; Karen Kay; Jesús Cisneros; Ashley Coughlin; Karen Guerrero; Gabriella Luu; Patricia Quijada Cererer; Leticia Alvarez Gutiérrez
Publication Date: 2021This edited volume brings together voices of Latinx students, teachers, teacher educators, and education allies in Latinx communities to reveal ways in which today's sociopolitical context has given rise to politically-sanctioned hateful anti-immigrant rhetoric.Studying Latinx/a/o students in higher education: a critical analysis of concepts, theory, and methodologies by Nichole M. Garcia; Cristobal Salinas; Jesús Cisneros
Publication Date: 2021"This edited volume examines the diverse Latinx/a/o student populations in higher education. Offering innovative approaches to understand the asset-based contributions of Latinx/a/o students and the communities they come from, this book showcases scholars from various disciplines, including, psychology, sociology, higher education, history, gender studies, and beyond."
- Last Updated: Feb 5, 2025 4:25 PM
- URL: https://guides.library.stanford.edu/latinx_and_ed
- Print Page