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Norma López; Sandra Pizano-Cruz; Cynthia Padilla-Gaytan – Journal of College Student Development, 2025
Research has focused on the importance of family to Latinx/a/o students. Yet, Latinx/a/o college student identity models have remained linear and individualistic. Centering Chicana/Latina Feminist epistemology and methodology, this study utilized pláticas to understand how a collectivist orientation influences the academic identity development of…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Self Concept, Graduate Students, Personal Autonomy
Juan F. Carrillo; Robert R. Martinez – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2024
This article examines the role of sport as it pertains to Latino male faculty. Specifically, we offer a contribution to the dearth of scholarship at the intersections of sport and how Latino male faculty make sense of their identities and academic journeys. The use of sport as a reference for understanding Latinx faculty identity is for the most…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Hispanic American Culture, Males, Athletics
Ramirez, Loretta – Composition Studies, 2023
This article considers a pedagogical approach that centralizes student-led archival retrieval of rhetorics. The precise context of the author's inquiry is situated in a Californian classroom wherein the author teaches writing in a Latinx Studies department, serving predominately Chicanx first-generation demographics. In that context, the article…
Descriptors: Archives, Hispanic American Students, Hispanic American Culture, Writing Instruction
Mabel E. Hernandez – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2024
This ethnographic case study utilizes intersectionality and sense of belonging to understand students' experiences in a Latino Bible study and how it contributes to their overall college experience. The findings suggest that the Bible study offers a unique space for students to explore faith, ethnic identity, and politics in a culturally…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Intersectionality, Sense of Community, Student Attitudes
Nuñez, Idalia – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2022
For many minoritized communities, sustaining or at least holding on to their home language and cultural identity has been a constant uphill battle. Nevertheless, Latina/o/x who speak Spanish, for example, have demonstrated to be linguistically and culturally resilient against hegemonic societal, institutional, political, and monolithic national…
Descriptors: Native Language, Cultural Awareness, Hispanic Americans, Hispanic American Culture
Examining the Influence of Peers on the Identity Development of Latinx Men in Male-Centered Programs
Yepez, Alex I. – Journal of Student Affairs, New York University, 2021
Recently, there has been a greater focus directed towards the collegiate experiences and success of male students of color on college campuses. In response, many campuses have begun implementing interventions or programs for the purpose of retaining Latinx men and men of color. Male-centered student programs provide Latinx men with a community and…
Descriptors: Peer Influence, Males, Hispanic American Students, Self Concept
Verenisse Ponce Soria – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The U.S. South, in spite of its racist Jim Crow era laws and political history, has the fastest growing Latine immigrant population in the country. In North Carolina alone, the Latine population is responsible for over one-third of the state's growth exceeding all other population groups. Despite this rapid-growing change, the state is third to…
Descriptors: Parent Teacher Cooperation, Hispanic American Students, Immigrants, United States History
López, Dixelia; Ochoa, Denisse; Romero, Monica; Parr, Kayla – Communique, 2020
According to the Pew Research Foundation (2019), as many as 60 million Latinxs/Hispanics are living in the United States, constituting approximately 18% of the population. This figure is expected to grow to 119 million by 2060 and constitute 28.6% of the population (Mental Health America, 2020). Between the years 2000 and 2017, Latinx/Hispanic…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Hispanic American Culture, Mental Health, School Psychology
Torres, Maritza – ProQuest LLC, 2019
In teaching leadership and leader identity development to Latina undergraduate women, it is imperative their salient identities are addressed and acknowledged. The teaching of standardized forms of leadership and the deconstruction of established leadership principles and paradigms also need to be taken into consideration. Leadership educators…
Descriptors: Leadership Training, Females, Hispanic American Students, Self Concept
Cashdollar, S. E. – Grantee Submission, 2018
Lidia and Josephina, although living vastly different lives, both represent Hispanic teen mothers. Pregnancies like theirs have been an issue of central concern in the U.S. for decades, with Hispanic teens considered most at risk. Despite vast recent declines in teen childbearing across all racial and ethnic groups, the U.S. continues to have the…
Descriptors: Pregnancy, Hispanic Americans, Adolescents, Adolescent Attitudes
From "Struggling" to "Example": How Cross-Age Tutoring Impacts Latina Adolescents' Reader Identities
Drake, Dustin H. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Educators and policy makers have shown a consistent concern over the achievement gap. In academic assessments, Latino students have demonstrated lower achievement than their peers, particularly in reading scores. Many researchers attribute the existence of the achievement gap to a school system that ignores Latino culture or perpetuates struggles…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Reading Instruction, Reading Difficulties, Achievement Gap
Garcia, Gina A. – Review of Higher Education, 2016
As institutions not founded to "serve" Latina/o students, Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs) are criticized for solely being "Hispanic-enrolling," with access and graduation rates being hypothesized as indicators of an organizational identity for HSIs. Drawing from a case study with 88 participants, the purpose of this…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Institutional Characteristics, Self Concept, College Students
Gonzalez, Roger Geertz; Morrison, Jeaná – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2016
The recent literature on Latino persistence does not take into account these students' distinct cultural backgrounds. Most researchers of Latino persistence use the self-designation "Latino" as a proxy variable representing Latino culture. A Latino Critical Theory (LatCrit) lens is applied to the persistence literature to demonstrate the…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Academic Persistence, Cultural Background, Critical Theory
Montas-Hunter, Sonja S. – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2012
In 2008, minorities represented only 16% of all senior administrators at institutions of higher learning and very few Hispanic women have made it to the "executive suites" of academia (Bridges et al., 2008). The purpose of this phenomenological study was to examine the self-efficacy of Hispanic women in leadership positions at higher education…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Females, Self Efficacy, Women Administrators
Guzman, Bianca – Journal of the Association of Mexican American Educators, 2012
In this article I argue that mothering in the home is an educational tool for creating positive self-agency in Latina girls. This essay articulates the ways in which my lived experiences as a Latina mother informs the socialization of "guerrera" girls. I engage in a process of "testimonio" to demonstrate how mothering, by using tools such as…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Culture, Daughters, Mothers, Hispanic Americans