Emerging Scholars Panel Photo Gallery
See photos from this special Expanding Equity in Educational Research event
On Thursday, May 16, 2024, the UC Davis School of Education and the Graduate Group in Education presented a special panel showcasing critical, diverse disciplinary perspectives in education from three exceptional pre-tenure scholars. Emerging Scholars: Expanding Equity in Educational Research took place at the UC Davis International Center, and featured scholars Aris Moreno Clemons, Harper B. Keenan, and Kristyn Lue.
Aris Moreno
Clemons is an Assistant Professor of Hispanic
Linguistics in the Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures
Department of the University of Tennessee Knoxville, and
specializes in the intersections between language, race, and
identity. Overarchingly, Aris questions the linguistic
mechanisms—repetitions, stance taking, tropicalizations,
etc.—responsible for the (re)construction and maintenance of
racializing and marginalizing ideologies. Her recent publications
deal with Dominican race making in public forums, making space
for bilingualism in English-Only classrooms, and expanding
current disciplinary methods and theoretical frames towards
liberatory justice for Black language users.
Harper
B. Keenan is an Assistant Professor in the
Department of Curriculum and Pedagogy at the University of
British Columbia, where he serves as the Robert Quartermain
Professor of Gender and Sexuality in Education. Dr. Keenan’s work
examines how adults guide children to make sense of the social
world. His primary goals as an academic are to contribute to the
education of young children and their teachers, and to shift
public thinking about children and childhood. He was a 2022
NAEd/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellow. His work has been published in
academic journals like Educational Researcher, the
Harvard Educational Review, and Teachers College
Record and has been featured in popular press outlets like
Teen Vogue, NPR, and NBC National News.
Kristyn
Lue is a Postdoctoral Scholar with the Pullias
Center for Higher Education at the Rossier School of Education,
where she works with Dr. Julie Posselt in the Equity in Graduate
Education Resource Center. She is also the Project Coordinator
for the Inclusive
Graduate Education Network (IGEN) Research Hub. Her research
foregrounds critical theoretical perspectives to understand how
socialization and cultural norms consolidate and reproduce power
along racialized hierarchies in STEM environments—and how this
reproduction might be disrupted in order to advance racial equity
and justice in the STEM fields. Lue earned her Ph.D. in
Mathematics Education from the University of Maryland, College
Park, where she was a Fey-Graeber Fellow in the Center for
Mathematics Education and a 2023 Ann G. Wylie Dissertation
Fellow. She was also a semi-finalist for the 2024 AERA Division J
Dissertation of the Year Award.