Watch our Institute for Emancipatory Education Speaker Series: Dr. David Stovall

Watch out Institute for Emancipatory Education speaker series! Dr. David Stovall talks about the constructs of Critical Race Theory (CRT) and Abolition to consider emancipatory education. If we are trying to create an education that liberates those who experience white supremacy in the form of isolation, marginalization, and dehumanization, we must be clear about the current socio-political moment. We must be willing to take away lessons of history to build a praxis (action and reflection in the world in order to change it) centered on the needs of our communities. Any struggle for change, time, space, and will is central moving forward.

Attend Our Intersectional Disability Studies Speaker Series

SJSU Lurie College of Education IEE Intersectional Disability Studies Speaker Series Lydia X.Z. Brown Alice Wong

The Intersectional Disability Studies Strand (IDSS), under the SJSU Lurie College of Education’s Institute for Emancipatory Education (IEE), serves as a community-engaged, culturally sustaining space that centers disability visibility and disability as an intersectional identity. Our strand provides specific resources and support to engage intersectional disability studies and accessibility in education.

Join us on Thursday, December 2, from 4:30-5:30pm PST on Zoom to learn from Alice Wong, disabled activist, writer, editor, media maker, consultant, and founder and director of the Disability Visibility Project. Live captions will be available at both events and ASL interpreters will be available at Alice’s event. If you are in need of additional accommodations, email luriecollege@sjsu.edu.

Learn more and RSVP at sjsu.edu/education/community/iee/ids.

 

Attend Our SJSU Ethnic Studies Collaborative Conversation

Join our SJSU Ethnic Studies Collaborative on Thursday, December 2, on Zoom for a conversation with Shadae Mallory, writer, educator, and social justice advocate who recently published children’s book (ages 6-9) focused on the history of the civil rights movement. You can register for this event at tinyurl.com/ShadaeMallory.

About the Author

Shadae B. Mallory, MA, is a writer, educator, and social justice advocate. They also work as a diversity, equity, and inclusion consultant and as a freelance writer. The History of the Civil Rights Movement is Shadae’s debut novel. You can follow them online at ShadaeMallory.com.

SJSU Lurie College of Education Ethnic Studies Collaborative Shadae Mallory

Lurie College Faculty Publishes Advocacy Piece

Shoutout to Child and Adolescent Development faculty Robert Marx, who published “Collective Memory for Queer and Trans Liberation” in Visible Magazine!

“Collective memory and intergenerational connection are the healing antidote to the forces of capitalism, White supremacy, and heteropatriarchy that aim to keep us too busy and downtrodden to see our own capacity to upend systems that work for only a very few. Just as I learned about my grandmother’s memories and ways of navigating oppression, so too does learning the ways of life of our queer and trans ancestors offer us a way to radically alter the material conditions which govern our lives and limit us.”

SJSU Lurie College of Education Child and Adolescent Development Faculty Robert Marx Visible Magazine

Hang out with out Lurie College Storytellers!

Come and hang out with our Lurie College Storytellers!  Keep up with them through the Lurie College Tik Tok and Instagram weekly to watch what they do during their weeks, give tips about school, talk about their passions, and more.

@sjsulurieAny fellow Swifties out there, what’s your favorite song from Red (Taylor’s Version)? ##storytellers ##redtaylorsversion ##sjsulurie

♬ Message In A Bottle (Taylor’s Version) (From The Vault) – Taylor Swift

@sjsulurieneeded this day off, but i hate when it feels like I wasted a day. 🙃 ##storytellers

♬ Paris Loves Lovers (Instrumental) – Cole Porter (composer), The MGM Studio Orchestra

Lurie College Faculty Co-Authors Book

Congratulations to Teacher Education faculty Allison Briceño, who has co-authored a forthcoming book, Conscious Classrooms: Using Diverse Texts for Inclusion, Equity and Justice Professional Development, which has been written to help teachers to include diverse texts and to support them in developing an equity lens in the classroom.

Become a ChAD Student Ambassador!

 

Hello Lurie College Undergraduate, and Graduate students! Are you looking for a hands on position in San Jose States most transformative educator program? This job might be for you. The ChAD Student Ambassador position piloted by Dr. Rayna Friendly continues Spring 2022 with Emily Slusser, and fellow peer Katrena Thompson. In this program you will give feedback, and participate in some of the many events we have open to students at Lurie College. This allows for improvement, and the continuation of growth for not only our staff but our students on and off campus. Please take some time to fill out the application that is due, December 31st, 2021 at 11:59.

Apply here!: https://forms.gle/3WUhZV62AUZ2t3xaA

Any Questions Email: Emily.slusser@SJSU.edu & Katrena.thompson@sjsu.edu D

Lurie College Faculty and Student Featured in CSU Panel

Shoutout to Teacher Education faculty Eduardo Muñoz-Muñoz and student Romina Román Shugan, who will be featured on the panel “Presente y futuro de los programas de preparación de educadores plurilingües: Educar y aprender en un contexto de translenguaje / Past and present in Plurilingual Teacher Preparation Programs: Educating and learning in translanguaging spaces” on Friday, November 19, at 10am as part of the CSU Educator Preparation and Public School Programs initiative.  Learn more and RSVP at calstate.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_HqaTvkwSTmS26qsOI3iD7Q

SJSU Lurie College of Education Teacher Education Faculty Eduardo Munoz-Munoz

 

Join Our Faculty Research Symposium

Join our SJSU Lurie College of Education faculty at our upcoming Faculty Research Symposium on Thurs., Nov. 18, from 11am-12pm, sjsu.zoom.us/j/81514161412, as they present their research related to university-community partnerships and first-generation faculty!
Presenters include:
– María Ledesma – Associate Professor, Department of Educational Leadership – “Towards a Tenure-Attaining Culture: Creating and Supporting Socialization Models for First-Generation Academicians”
– Danielle Mead – Assistant Professor, Department of Child & Adolescent Development – “Establishing a University-Community Partnership with the San Jose Public Library”

Attend Our Institute for Emancipatory Education Webinar

Join our SJSU Lurie College of Education Institute for Emancipatory Education on Monday, November 15, from 5-6:30pm for “Critical Race Theory and Abolition: Struggle and the Praxis of Emancipatory Education” with Dr. David Stovall!  Learn more and RSVP at sjsu.edu/education/community/iee

Watch and Relax with Our Storytellers

Sit back, laugh, and relax with our Lurie College Storytellers. Keep up with them through the Lurie College Tik Tok and Instagram weekly to watch what they do during their weeks, give tips about school, talk about their passions, and more.

https://www.tiktok.com/@sjsulurie/video/7027930966119288069?is_copy_url=0&is_from_webapp=v1&sender_device=pc&sender_web_id=7024232600864916998
https://www.tiktok.com/@sjsulurie/video/7026960920542956846?is_copy_url=0&is_from_webapp=v1&sender_device=pc&sender_web_id=7024232600864916998

Watch Our EdD Leadership Alumni’s Documentary

According to a popular study, 95% of adolescents own a cell phone and 45% are online almost constantly. When Cellphones Come To School, a new very timely, informative and provocative one hour documentary from high school teacher and EdD Leadership Program alumni Anne Tran, shows what happens when these phones predictably end up in classrooms and the impact on learning that results. Featuring interviews with a diverse range of students, teachers and experts, When Cellphones Come To School, highlights both positive and negative outcomes and points the way toward creating a better understanding of the national debate around the role cellphones might and do play in classroom education settings.

MA in Higher Education Info Sessions

The website for the MA in Higher Education is now live! The Educational Leadership department is hosting several upcoming info sessions for prospective students to learn more about this program. Below is a list of upcoming info sessions and you can follow this link to register. 
  • Monday, November 8, 12-1pm
  • Monday, November 15, 5:30-6:30pm
  • Wednesday, December 1, 4:30-5:30pm

Look to the Future With Our Lurie College Storytellers!

Watch as our storytellers think about what the future will be like when they leave Lurie College! Keep up with them through the Lurie College Tik Tok and Instagram weekly to watch what they do during their weeks, give tips about school, talk about their passions, and more!

@sjsulurie##greenscreen Some of the many inspirations I have to become a teacher. ##sjsulurie ##storyteller ##teacher

♬ Mama Said – Lukas Graham

@sjsulurieFuture SLP, sometimes in college the future feels so far, but i know it’s not far! also shameless plug for NSSHLA! CDS students join SJSU NSSHLA! ❤️

♬ original sound – 🍒

Lurie College Faculty Quoted in NBC News Article

Shoutout to Educational Leadership faculty Maria Ledesma, who was quoted in the article “Manufactured Boogeyman: Latino Critical Race Theory Pioneers, Advocates Push Back” by NBC News!

“To María Ledesma, associate professor at San Jose State University, critical race theory is about truth-telling, a way of looking at history in a comprehensive way.

Ledesma is not surprised by the theory’s current controversy. “It is a manufactured boogeyman on behalf of conservative politicians and pundits to distract attention from the global racial reckoning movement. By making critical race theory the boogeyman, we hear less about Black Lives Matter, less about police brutality, and less about the real actions needed to change our society.”

The biggest misconception about the theory is that it somehow teaches students of color to hate white people, Ledesma said. “Not true at all; critical race theory does not villainize one group over another.”

SJSU Lurie College of Education Educational Leadership Department Faculty María Ledesma

Dance with our Lurie College Storytellers!

Dance along with Ana and Caryn as they talk about being a speech and language pathologist and a teacher! Keep up with them through the Lurie College Tik Tok and Instagram weekly to watch what they do during their weeks, give tips about school, talk about their passions, and more!

@sjsulurieIf you want to be a teacher, now is the time. ##sjsulurie ##storyteller ##studentteacher ##newteacher♬ original sound – Matt Randone

@sjsulurieSo many more reasons why i want to be an SLP!! ❤️ Have you ever considered being an SLP???? ##storytellers ##sjsu♬ original sound – SPANKY YNVS

Attend the Lurie College Student Open Forum

SJSU Lurie College of Education Student Forum

Join Dean Heather Lattimer and Associate Dean Marcos Pizarro on Friday, November 5, from 9-10am on Zoom for an informal discussion about your student priorities!  The information to join the Zoom discussion was sent to Lurie College students via a Google Calendar email invitaiton.

Lurie College Faculty Awarded Social Action Grant

Congratulations to Educational Leadership faculty Veneice Guillory-Lacy, who recently received the 2021-2022 Bonner Foundation Community-Engagement Course Development for Social Action Grant. The course will be developed to give current Master’s level teacher-leaders the opportunity to put theory into practice through collaborative approaches to deconstruct power systems, challenge inequitable practices and policies, and conduct research for a living case study.

SJSU Lurie College of Education Educational Leadership Faculty Veneice Guillory-Lacy

Lurie College Associate Dean Featured in SJSU Good Trouble Panel

Associate Dean Marcos Pizarro was recently featured in the SJSU Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion’s (ODEI) Good Trouble series, which features stories of activism and necessary trouble from Bay Area Leaders.  In celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month – Sep. 15-Oct. 15th, this episode featured the experiences, stories, and wisdom of SJSU Chicanx/Latinx staff, faculty, and administrators on our campus: Magdalena Barrera, Marcos Pizzaro, Fernanda Perdomo-Arciniegas, Lilly Pinedo Gangai, and Ana Navarrete.

Lurie College Faculty Presents at University Scholar Series

Dr. Pei-Tzu Tsai presented “Learning from Stuttering: A Path from Disorder to Diversity” as part of the SJSU University Scholar Series. Dr. Tsai discussed underlying factors of stuttering and stuttering therapy to develop culturally and linguistically responsive services for individuals who stutter and advocated for acceptance and diversity in communication.