Judith Flores Carmona (PhD, University of Utah) is Assistant Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction and in the Honors College at New Mexico State University. Her work has appeared in Race Ethnicity and Education, Equity and Excellence in Education, and Chicana/Latina Studies: The Journal of Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social.
Kristen V. Luschen (PhD, Syracuse University) is Associate Professor of Education Studies and a founding faculty member of the Critical Studies of Childhood, Youth and Learning Program at Hampshire College. Her work has appeared in several edited books and in the journals Educational Studies and Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning.
Contents: Judith Flores Carmona/Kristen V. Luschen: Introduction: Weaving Together Pedagogies and Methodologies of Collaboration, Inclusion, and Voice - Christine Sleeter: Inheriting Footholds and Cushions: Family Legacies and Institutional Racism - Ellen Correa: «I Knew When You Said Your Name in Spanish!»: On Being a White Puerto Rican in the Classroom - Jane Van Galen: Mediated Stories of Educational Mobility: Digital Stories in Teacher Education - Barbara Kessel/Kim Hackford-Peer: Here I Stand: College Students' Critical Education Narratives - Judith Flores Carmona/Aymee Malena Luciano: A Student-Teacher Testimonio: Reflexivity, Empathy, and Pedagogy - Sherick Hughes/Kate Willink: Engaging Co-Reflexive Critical Dialogues When Entering and Leaving the «Field»: Toward Informing Collaborative Research Methods at the Color Line and Beyond - DeeDee Mower: The Rose Creek Oral History Project: Elementary Cross-Grade Social Studies Curriculum in Review - Kristen V. Luschen: Exploring (Dis)Connections Through Digital Storytelling: Toward Pedagogies of Critical Co-Learning - Sundy Watanabe: Critical Storying: Power Through Survivance and Rhetorical Sovereignty - Hilton Kelly: The Politics and Poetics of Oral History in Qualitative Research: This One's for Nikki Giovanni - James H. Adams/Natalie G. Adams: «Some of Us Got Heard More Than Others»: Studying Brown Through Oral History and Critical Race Theory - J. Luis Loya-García: Mojarra Linguistic Syndrome, Evading Capture by the Tongue: Heritage Speakers of Spanish and Their Stigma.