LOS ANGELES — A diverse group of researchers from multiple University of California campuses were awarded grants for their work in addressing educational inequalities.
UC/ACCORD All Campus Consortium on Research for Diversity awarded 13 dissertation fellowships to doctoral students from UC Berkeley, UCLA, UC Davis, UC Santa Cruz and UC Irvine. Their fields of study include education, sociology and social welfare. A faculty seed grant, which supports initial stages of research, was also awarded to a UC Riverside professor working with Latino high school students and the correlation between their mental health and academic success.
"The strength of the UC system is its ten campuses," said Daniel G. Solórzano, UC/ACCORD director and professor of education at UCLA. "Identifying young researchers and faculty who are at the cutting-edge of research in educational access, equity and diversity in California public schools takes advantage of that strength."
This year's fellows will present their work at the 11th annual UC/ACCORD conference held in Lake Arrowhead, Calif., Friday through Sunday (Nov. 4-6).
UC/ACCORD seeks to increase the number of graduate students and faculty within the UC system whose scholarship inform critical conditions for enhancing college opportunities, transitions in the lives of underrepresented students, and issues related to making higher education accessible to all Californians. The Dissertation Fellowship and Faculty Seed Grant recipients engage in research that will support and inform Californians' efforts to replace prevailing patterns of schooling inequality and disparities in access to higher education with equitable conditions and outcomes for children from all sectors of the state.
Since 2001, UC/ACCORD has awarded 88 dissertation fellowships, 11 postdoctoral fellowships and 24 faculty seed grants totaling about $2.7 million.
Thirteen dissertation fellowships were awarded to the following doctoral students:
Yolanda Anyon is a doctoral student at
the School of Social Welfare at UC Berkeley. Her research interests include racial
and ethnic disparities, school-based interventions and positive youth
development. Anyon's dissertation examines the help-seeking pathways of
low-income youth of color in educational settings, considering the influence of
school context on students' use of school-based health and social service
programs.
Dissertation:
School-Based Health and Social Services: Reducing or Reproducing Inequality in
Education?
Melanie Bertrand is a doctoral student in urban schooling at UCLA's Graduate School of Education and Information Studies.
Using ethnography and critical discourse analysis, she studies the potential of
Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR)-youth-driven, collective research
and advocacy-to challenge systemic racism in education.
Dissertation:
Working Toward Change: Youth Researchers Challenging Systemic Racism in
Education
Manuelito Biag is a doctoral student in school organization and educational policy at UC Davis' School of Education. His
research interests include the organization of schools, school health programs
and policies, and the connections among young people's health, psychosocial
development, and educational trajectories. His current research examines data
from the National Longitudinal Study on Adolescent Health to determine how use
of school health services shape students' academic outcomes.
Dissertation:
Adolescent Well-Being and School Connectedness: Implications for School
Practices and Policies
Jessica Cobb is a doctoral student in
the Department of Sociology at UC Berkeley. Cobb's research interests include
the sociology of childhood and education. Her dissertation employs in-depth
interviews to explore the subjective experiences of teachers in three
racialized-class segregated schools in Southern California, especially how
teachers think about their work and inequality.
Dissertation:
Shocking Inequality: Teachers' Subjective Experiences of Unequal Schools
Rhoda Freelon is a doctoral student in urban schooling at UCLA's Graduate School of Education and Information Studies.
Freelon's research uses quantitative and qualitative methodological approaches
to explore African American parent engagement and the intersection of race- and
class-based educational inequality.
Dissertation:
Shaping the Lives of their Children: How African American Parents Make
Emotional Investments
Elizabeth
Gilliland
is a doctoral student in language, literacy and culture at the UC Davis School
of Education, with designated emphases in second language acquisition and writing, rhetoric, and composition studies. Gilliland studies how high school
second language writers, particularly long-term English language learners
(ELLs), understand academic language and writing. Her research focuses on how federal
and state policies affect ELLs' access to quality literacy instruction and,
consequently, their preparation for college-level writing demands.
Dissertation:
Talking about Writing: Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Adolescents'
Socialization into Academic Literacy
Sera Hernández is a doctoral student in language, literacy and culture at UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Education.
Her research focuses on U.S. language politics and how they impact language use
and literacy practices in homes and schools. Her dissertation examines how
educational discourse and policies influence interactions between the home and
school for Mexican immigrant families with children in middle school, and the
implications of these day-to-day interactions on the families' long-term
educational expectations.
Dissertation:
Beyond Risks and Resources: Educational Discourse and the Construction of the
Home-School Relationship for Mexican Immigrant Families
Kim Nga Huynh is a doctoral student in policy and organizations research at UC Berkeley's Graduate School of
Education. Huynh's research interests include community colleges, school
organization, remediation, marginalized youths, and the role of teacher/faculty
beliefs in the education process. Her dissertation research highlights
transitional periods; specifically examining how new community college students
perceive opportunities and constraints within their respective institution, and
the ways they adapt to institutional weaknesses.
Dissertation:
Stepping Stones to a Baccalaureate
Edward Lyon is a doctoral student in mathematics
and science education at UC Santa Cruz's Education Department. Lyon's research
interest involves understanding how k-12 science teachers can assess in ways
that are consistent with science education reform and equitable for English
learners. His dissertation research studies 11 secondary science preservice
teachers and draws upon assessment construction, use, and equity as theoretical
lenses to explore in what ways the teachers' assessment expertise changed
during their teacher education program.
Dissertation:
Shifting from Assessment as Evaluation to Assessment as a Vehicle for Science
Learning and Equity: Changes in Secondary Science Preservice Teachers'
Assessment Expertise
Danny C.
Martínez is
a doctoral student in urban schooling at UCLA's Graduate School of Education
and Information Studies. Martínez' research documents the diverse language and
literacy practices of youth from non-dominant groups in and out of schools. His
dissertation examines patterns of intercultural communication between black and
Latino youth, the diverse ways these youth become communicatively competent
members of their various communities, and their underlying language ideologies.
Dissertation:
Expanding Linguistic Repertoires: An Ethnography of Black and Latino
Intercultural Communication at Willow High School
Tina
Matuchniak
is a doctoral student specializing in language, literacy and technology at UC
Irvine's Department of Education. Matuchniak's research examines the impact of
high school ELLs' writing practices and performances on their ability to gain
access to and succeed in college. Her interests include studying effective
language and literacy interventions at the secondary school level, understanding
factors that promote effective transition from high school and college, and
investigating the impact of literacy preparation on college retention and
persistence.
Dissertation:
Mind the Gap: A Cognitive Strategies Approach to College Writing Readiness
Ronald K.
Porter is a
doctoral student in social and cultural studies at UC Berkeley's Graduate
School of Education. His research interests include African-American
educational thought and critical theories of race, gender and sexuality. Porter's
dissertation research traces the intellectual history of African-American
educational thought looking specifically at the work of W.E.B. Du Bois, Alain
Locke and James Baldwin.
Dissertation:
Contested Humanity: Blackness and the Educative Remaking of the Human in the 20th
Century
Femi Vance is a doctoral student in educational policy and social context at UC Irvine's Department of Education. Her research
interests include the quality of after-school programs, attracting adolescents
to after-school programs, and the use of positive youth development approach in
educational settings. Vance relies on her research to inform her work with
after-school programs in Southern California, where she provides professional
development and program improvement strategies.
Dissertation:
Adolescent Skill-Building and the Persistence in Youth Programs
The Faculty Seed Grant for the 2011-12 year was awarded to Sara Castro-Olivo, an assistant professor in School Psychology at UC Riverside's Graduate School of Education. Her project-Facilitating Universal Emotional Resiliency for the Social and Academic Success (FUERSAS) of Latino English Language Learners-will identify high school students at risk of dropping out and study the impacts of cultural and social interventions. Born and raised in El Salvador, Castro-Olivo came to the United States at 14 and experienced firsthand the social and emotional impact of being an immigrant and English language learner. Her research focuses on promoting social-emotional and academic resiliency among culturally and linguistically diverse populations.

