Emerging Scholars Panel
Expanding Equity in Research on Language, Race & Culture, and Intersectionality & Policy
NOTE VENUE CHANGE TO WEBINAR:
Thursday, May 11
4:30 – 6:30 p.m.
Register for Zoom link: https://bit.ly/3NBVAij
UC Davis School of Education and the Graduate Group in Education present this special panel showcasing critical, diverse disciplinary perspectives in education from exceptional pre-tenure scholars across the nation. Download a PDF of the flyer.
Presenters
Sofía
E. Chaparro, PhD is an Assistant Professor at the
University of Colorado Denver, where she teaches in the
Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Education program at the
School of Education and Human Development. Her research
investigates how race and class influence ideologies of language
development and bilingualism, as well as equity in bilingual
programs and for bilingual Latinx students and families. She
obtained her PhD in Educational Linguistics from the Graduate
School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania. Prior to
graduate school, Chaparro was a teacher in bilingual schools in
Massachusetts and Texas. Chaparro is originally from the border
town of El Paso, TX, where she grew up bilingually and
biculturally.
Lauren Leigh Kelly,
PhD is an Assistant Professor in the Graduate School
of Education at Rutgers University. She is also the founder of
the annual Hip Hop Youth Research and Activism Conference. Kelly
taught high school English for ten years in New York where she
also developed courses in Hip Hop Literature and Culture, Spoken
Word poetry, and Theatre Arts. Her research focuses on adolescent
critical literacy development, Black feminist theory, Hip Hop
pedagogy, critical consciousness, and the development of
critical, culturally sustaining pedagogies. Dr. Kelly’s work has
been nationally recognized, including receiving the 2022 Nasir
Jones Fellowship at the Hutchins Center for African and African
American Research at Harvard University, the 2022 NAEd/Spencer
Postdoctoral Fellowship, the 2021 Save the Kids Hip Hop Activism
Scholar-Activist of the Year Award, and the 2020 American
Educational Research Association (AERA) Writing and Literacies
Special Interest Group Steve Cahir Early Career Award.
Manali
Sheth, PhD is an Assistant Professor in the
University of Illinois Chicago College of Education Department of
Educational Policy Studies. Her research interests focus on
disrupting educational injustices experienced by multiply
marginalized students of color in their capacities as knowers and
learners. Working from a critical race and intersectional
feminist pedagogy lens, Dr. Sheth examines how academic
conditions exacerbate educational inequities as well as how
transformative pedagogies can cultivate critical academic praxis
across disciplines, including STEM. Her current and future
research projects illuminate how relationships of power,
knowledge, and practice shape and can be shifted through
pedagogy, curriculum, and policy for students of color whose
experiences, interests, and needs are often marginalized in
equity and justice initiatives across secondary and
post-secondary academic settings.
Krystal
L. Williams, PhD is an Assistant Professor in the
University of Georgia Louise McBee Institute of Higher Education.
She is also the Director of the Education Policy & Equity
Research Collective. Her research explores issues regarding
equity and public policy, with an emphasis on Historically Black
Colleges and Universities and broadening participation in
science, technology, engineering, and mathematics for
underrepresented groups. Prior to joining the University of
Georgia faculty, Williams was a faculty member at the University
of Alabama, a Senior Research Associate at the United Negro
College Fund Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute, an
American Educational Research Association (AERA) Postdoctoral
Fellow at Educational Testing Service and an AERA Minority
Dissertation Fellow in Education Research.
Event questions? Please contact Pamela Erickson.