Important Dates:
- Thursday, August 25: First day of Fall 2022 classes
- Wednesday, August 31: Last day to add a course
- Friday – Sunday September 2-4: No classes scheduled
- Monday, September 5: College Closed – Labor Day Observed
- Monday – Tuesday September 26-27: No classes scheduled
- Thursday, September 29: Conversion day, classes follow Monday schedule
- Tuesday- Wednesday October 4-5: No classes scheduled
- Monday, October 10: College closed – No classes scheduled
- Thursday-Friday November 24-25: College closed – No classes scheduled
- Saturday-Sunday November 26-27: No classes scheduled
- Tuesday, December 13: Last day of classes
The full academic calendar, including many other important dates, is available on the Office of the Registrar’s website.
Course Schedule:
UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION
Class Session 1: Thursday, August 25th
- Course Introduction
- Syllabus and CUNY Academic Commons Site
- Reading and Note-taking Overview
- Terminology
Class Session 2: Tuesday, August 30th
Sociopolitical Context
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Book Chapter: Nieto. (2017). Latinas/os and the Elusive Quest for Equal Education. In A Companion to Latina/o Studies (pp. 215–228). Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781405177603.ch20
- Reports: Read the following quick reports from the National Research Center on Hispanic Children and Families:
In-Class Texts:
- Documentary: Gold, & Sporn, P. (2021). Making the impossible possible: the story of Puerto Rican studies in Brooklyn College. Grito Productions.
- CUNY-NYSIEB Languages of New York State
- CUNY-NYSIEB New York State Department of Education Policies, Mandates, and Initiatives on the Education of English Language Learners
- New York City Department of Education Division of Multilingual Learners – Program Options
- New York City Graduation Rates Class of 2021 (2017 Cohort)
- New York City Department of Education – Division of Multilingual Learners 2020-2021 ELL Demographics At-a-Glance
- US Department of education chapter 6 tools and resources for addressing english learners with disabilities
- New York City Department of Education InfoHub – Demographic Snapshot (scroll to Demographic Snapshot to download the excel file with data)
Class Session 3: Thursday, September 1st
Learning from Latinx Children
Texts to Engage Before Class: Select one group and read the text(s) for that group.
Early Childhood & Elementary:
- National Research Center on Hispanic Children and Families – “The Early Home Environment of Latino Children: A Research Synthesis” Natasha J. Cabrera and Avery Hennigar
- Video clip: CUNY-NY State Initiative on Emergent Bilinguals (CUNY-NYSIEB) Teacher Leader, Dr. Gladys Aponte, 4th Grade Lesson Clip: Why does Julia Alvarez use buen provecho?
Middle Grade:
- Excerpt from a dissertation (chapters 1 and 3): Gonzalez, A. R. (2013). Under the `hood’: Poor and Working Class Black and Latino Boys in the Age of Obamerica. UC Berkeley. ProQuest ID: Gonzalez_berkeley_0028E_14048. Merritt ID: ark:/13030/m59k905p. Retrieved from https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8f68g9xn
- Video: WNYC “Because I’m Latino, I Can’t Have Money?” Kids on Race
Adolescents:
- Book chapter “Schooling Immigrant Youth”: Bartlett, & García, O. (2011). Additive schooling in subtractive times: bilingual education and Dominican immigrant youth in the Heights. Vanderbilt University Press.
- Video: Teens Take Charge – Admissions and Exclusion: Black and Latino and New York City’s Specialized High Schools
In-Class Texts:
- Overview of Latinx Children’s Experience in a Middle School in NYC: Espana, Carla, “Escribiendo para desahogarme: Release and Resistance in a Middle School Bilingual Writing Workshop” (2017). CUNY Academic Works.
- Excerpt (“How to Tame a Wild Tongue”): Anzaldúa, Cantú, N. E., & Hurtado, A. (2012). Borderlands/La frontera : the new mestiza (25th anniversary, fourth edition.). Aunt Lute Books.
UNIT 2: CULTURE, IDENTITY, AND DISCRIMINATION
Class Session 4: Tuesday, September 6th
Latinidad
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Journal article: “Transnational Renderings of Negro/a/x/*: Re-centering Blackness in AfroLatinidad” by Omaris Z. Zamora
- One of the following:
- Media: The Root, “Afro-indigenous Poet Alan Pelaez Lopez Breaks Down Why Blackness is Radical in Latinidad”
Class Session 5: Thursday, September 8th
Prejudicial Treatment of Latinx Children
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Book chapter: Espinola, M., Zhen-Duan, J., Suarez-Cano, G., Mowry-Mora, I., Shultz, J.M. (2019). The Impact of US Sociopolitical Issues on the Prejudicial Treatment of Latino Children and Youth. In: Fitzgerald, H., Johnson, D., Qin, D., Villarruel, F., Norder, J. (eds) Handbook of Children and Prejudice. Springer, Cham. https://doi-org.brooklyn.ezproxy.cuny.edu/10.1007/978-3-030-12228-7_9
- Book chapter: Jacobs, J. (2021). What Do You Mean, You Feel Latina?”: Use of Pan-Ethnic Identity Labels among Middle School Bilingual Youth. In M. Jiménez-Silva & J. Bempechat (Eds.). Latinx experiences in U.S. schools: voices of students, teachers, teacher educators, and education allies in challenging sociopolitical times (pp. 25-46). Lexington Books. Access on Blackboard announcement or here.
Class Session 6: Thursday, September 13th
Caribbean Identity Part One
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Article: Leonika Valcius. (2012). The Caribbean Diaspora and the Formation of Identity in Second Generation Immigrants. Caribbean Quilt, 1. https://doi.org/10.33137/caribbeanquilt.v1i0.19038
- Book chapter: Quintana, S.M., Benjamin, J.Z., Turan, N. (2022). Immigrant Identity Narratives: Youth Literacy Project. In: Johnson, D.J., Chuang, S.S., Glozman, J. (eds) Re/Formation and Identity. Advances in Immigrant Family Research. Springer, Cham. https://doi-org.brooklyn.ezproxy.cuny.edu/10.1007/978-3-030-86426-2_7
- Video Series: CUNY Initiative on Immigration and Education: Supporting Immigrants in Schools
In-Class Texts:
- Interactive Map: NYC DOE Division of Multilingual Learners Community-Based Organizations that support our linguistically and culturally diverse families
- Scenes from the documentary “Culture Clash: Caribbean Children of Immigrant Parents”
- I Learn Library: Stories from immigrant youth in NYC
Class Session 7: Tuesday, September 15th
Caribbean Identity Part Two
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Article: Richards. (2014). Ethnic identity on display: West Indian youth and the creation of ethnic boundaries in high school. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 37(6), 978–997. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2012.748212
Class Session 6: Tuesday, September 20th
Reading Response Paper #1 Due
(On Blackboard Turn It In by 9 am)
Reading Response Paper Task and Rubric Here
- Sharing reading response papers.
- Discussing note-taking techniques, what worked from the reading response paper experience, and goals for the next paper.
UNIT 3: LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY, BILINGUAL EDUCATION, AND TESOL PROGRAMMING
Class Session 9: Thursday, September 22nd
Linguistic Diversity
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Vocal Fries podcast episode “Bilingualism Is. It Just Is.” interview with Nelson Flores and Jonathan Rosa
- Site: NYC Department of Education Program Options for Bi/Multilingual Learners
- Video: NYS English Language Learner Programs
RESEARCH WORKSHOP SESSION TWO
Class Session 10: Tuesday, September 27th
Library Research Session Two with PRLS Library Liaison, Prof. Beth Evans
Room 120 in the Library
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Research Tips: Brooklyn College Library – Beginning Research Step-by-Step
- Research Paper Checklist
In-Class Texts:
Poet/Poems of the Day: Martín Espada, “Letter to My Father” and “After the Goose that Rose Like the God of Geese” (Poetry Unbound podcast episode)
Class Session 10: Tuesday, September 27th
Bilingual Education History in New York City
Texts to Engage Before Class:
Book chapter: “Bilingual Education and Puerto Rican Studies: From Vision to Reality” by Antonio Nadal and Milga Morales Nadal in Pérez y González, & Sánchez Korrol, V. (2021). Puerto Rican Studies in the City University of New York : the first 50 years(Pérez y González & V. Sánchez Korrol, Eds.). Centro Press.
In-Class Texts:
Media: Jiménez, Olmos, E. J., & Pantoja, A. (2009). Antonia Pantoja : ¡Presente! Distributed by Women Make Movies.
Our class does not meet on Thursday, September 29th.
Classes follow a MONDAY schedule.
Class Session 11: Thursday, October 4th
Beyond Bilingual Education in New York
Texts to Engage Before Class:
Book chapter: García, Zakharia, Z., & Otcu, B. (2018). Bilingual Community Education: Beyond Heritage Language Education and Bilingual Education in New York. In Bilingual Community Education and Multilingualism: Beyond Heritage Languages in a Global City (pp. 3–42). Multilingual Matters. https://doi.org/10.21832/9781847698018-003
Class Session 12: Tuesday, October 6th
Bilingual Students Labeled as Disabled
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Article: Cioè-Peña. (2020). Raciolinguistics and the Education of Emergent Bilinguals Labeled as Disabled. The Urban Review, 53(3), 443–469. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11256-020-00581-z
- Article: Cioè-Peña. (2020). Bilingualism for students with disabilities, deficit or advantage?: Perspectives of Latinx mothers. Bilingual Research Journal, 43(3), 253–266. https://doi.org/10.1080/15235882.2020.1799884
Class Session 13: Thursday, October 11th
TESOL
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Book Chapter: Wright, W. (2019). Language Rights and Policy in K-12 TESOL. In L. de Oliveira (Ed.). The handbook of TESOL in k-12 (pp.55-68). John Wiley & Sons. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119421702.ch17
- Article: Menken, & Sánchez, M. T. (Maite). (2019). Translanguaging in English‐Only Schools: From Pedagogy to Stance in the Disruption of Monolingual Policies and Practices. TESOL Quarterly, 53(3), 741–767. https://doi.org/10.1002/tesq.513
Class Session 14: Tuesday, October 13th
Challenging Prevailing Assumptions About Language
Texts to Engage Before Class:
Article: García, Flores, N., Seltzer, K., Wei, L., Otheguy, R., & Rosa, J. (2021). Rejecting abyssal thinking in the language and education of racialized bilinguals: A manifesto. Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 18(3), 203–228. https://doi.org/10.1080/15427587.2021.1935957
MID-TERM
Class Session 15: Tuesday, October 18th
In-class midterm exam on content from sessions 1-14.
UNIT 4: TRANSLANGUAGING PEDAGOGY
Class Session 16: Tuesday, October 20th
Translanguaging Pedagogy in Elementary School, Middle School, and High School
Texts to Engage Before Class:
Select one of the following:
- (Elementary School) Book Chapter: Morell, Z., & López, D (2021). Translanguaging and emergent literacy in early childhood education. In CUNY-New York State Initiative on Emergent Bilinguals (Ed.), Translanguaging and transformative teaching for emergent bilingual students: lessons from the CUNY-NYSIEB Project. (pp. 149-170). Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
- (Middle School) Article: Radke, Vogel, S. E., Ma, J. Y., Hoadley, C., & Ascenzi-Moreno, L. (2022). Emergent Bilingual Middle Schoolers’ Syncretic Reasoning in Statistical Modeling. Teachers College Record (1970), 124(5), 206–228. https://doi.org/10.1177/01614681221104141
- (High School) Article: Cati V. de los Ríos, & Kate Seltzer. (2017). Translanguaging, Coloniality, and English Classrooms: An Exploration of Two Bicoastal Urban Classrooms. Research in the Teaching of English, 52(1), 55–76.
Class Session 17: Thursday, October 25th
Translanguaging Design Examples
Texts to Engage Before Class:
Select one of the following:
- Article: Cioè‐Peña. (2022). TrUDL, A Path to Full Inclusion: The Intersectional Possibilities of Translanguaging and Universal Design for Learning. TESOL Quarterly, 56(2), 799–812. https://doi.org/10.1002/tesq.3074
- Book chapter: Kleyn, T., & García, O. (2019). Translanguaging as an act of transformation: Restructuring teaching and learning for emergent bilingual students. In L. de Oliveira (Ed.). The handbook of TESOL in k-12 (pp. 69-82). John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119421702.ch6
UNIT 5: FAMILY AND COMMUNITY
Class Session 18: Thursday, October 27th
Family-School Partnerships and Community Education
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Book Chapter: Sonnenschein, & Sawyer, B. E. (2018). Academic Socialization of Young Black and Latino Children: Building on Family Strengths. Springer International Publishing AG.
- “Toward Improving the Educational Opportunities for Black and Latinx Young Children: Strengthening Family-School Partnerships” by Angélica Montoya-Ávila, Nardos Ghebreab, and Claudia Galindo
- Book chapter: Makar. (2018). Building Communities through Bilingual Education: The Case of Asociación Tepeyac de New York. In Bilingual Community Education and Multilingualism (pp. 45–59). Multilingual Matters. https://doi.org/10.21832/9781847698018-004
- “Building Communities through Bilingual Education: The Case of Asociación Tepeyac de New York by Carmina Makar
Class Session 19: Thursday, November 1st
Latinx Children’s Experiences with Religion
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Book chapter (“Family, School, and Church”): Pantoja. (2005). Religion and Education among Latinos in New York City. BRILL
- Book chapter: Chen, C., & Jeung, R. (Eds.). (2012). Sustaining faith traditions : Race, ethnicity, and religion among the latino and asian american second generation. New York University Press.
- “Second Generation Latin@ Faith Institutions and Identity Formations” by Milagros Peña and Edwin I. Hernández
Class Session 20: Tuesday, November 3rd
Caribbean Immigrant Families on School Choice
Texts to Engage Before Class:
Master’s Thesis for the Graduate Center, CUNY – James, K. T., “Caribbean Immigrant Parents and Elementary School Choice in New York City” (2022). CUNY Academic Works.
Class Session 21: Tuesday, November 8th
RESEARCH WORKSHOP (Library Room 120) with Prof. Evans
Class Session 22: Thursday, November 10th
Reading Response Paper #2 Due
(On Blackboard TurnItIn by 9 am)
Health
Text to Engage Before Class:
- Report: Read the following quick report from the National Research Center on Hispanic Children and Families: The Rate of Children Without Health Insurance Is Rising, Particularly among Latino Children of Immigrant Parents and White Children
- News Article: The City – “1 in Every 200 NYC Children Have Lost a Parent or Caregiver to COVID. That’s Almost Twice the National Rate” by Fazil Khan
- Article: Zerrate, VanBronkhorst, S. B., Klotz, J., Caraballo, A. A., Canino, G., Bird, H. R., & Duarte, C. S. (2022). Espiritismo and Santeria: a gateway to child mental health services among Puerto Rican families? Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health, 16(1), 3–3. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13034-022-00439-0
In-class Text:
UNIT 6: CURRICULUM
Class Session 23: Thursday, November 15th
ASYNCHRONOUS ONLINE MODULE
(There is no in-person class today)
Select one curriculum sample to review and post on our module for online discussion:
- NYC DOE Department of Social Studies: Hidden Voices: LGBTQ+ Stories in United States History (read the introduction)
- Excerpt lessons from Teaching About Gender Diversity: Teacher-Tested Plans for K-12 Classrooms (in class)
- Chapter 6 on Curriculum Modifications here: Espana, Carla, “Escribiendo para desahogarme: Release and Resistance in a Middle School Bilingual Writing Workshop” (2017). CUNY Academic Works. https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/2119
- NYC DOE: Culturally Responsive-Sustaining Education in K-12 Science
Class Session 24: Tuesday, November 17th
Curriculum and Racism
Texts to Engage Before Class:
Book Chapter (“Curriculum and Racism”): Leonardo, & Grubb, W. N. (2014). Education and racism : a primer on issues and dilemmas. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203814376
Class Session 25: Tuesday, November 22nd
Culturally Relevant Education and Racism
Text to Engage Before Class:
- Book Chapter : Leonardo, & Grubb, W. N. (2014). Education and racism : a primer on issues and dilemmas. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203814376
- “Culturally Relevant Education and Racism”
- Book chapters: Literacy Is Liberation: Working Toward Justice Through Culturally Relevant Teaching by Kimberly N. Parker (2022)
- “Starting with Ourselves: Why Culturally Relevant Literature Instruction Begins with Us First” and “Digging Deeper into Culturally Relevant Pedagogy”
Class Session 26: Thursday, November 29th
Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Article: Paris, & Alim, H. S. (2014). What Are We Seeking to Sustain Through Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy? A Loving Critique Forward. Harvard Educational Review, 84(1), 85–100. https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.84.1.982l873k2ht16m77
- Education Week Interview with Django Paris and H.Samy Alim
In-Class Texts:
- Toolkit: NYU Metro Center Culturally Responsive Curriculum Scorecard
- NYC and NYS Curriculum Frameworks to Review
- New York State Culturally Responsive-Sustaining Education Framework
- https://www.teachingaboutgenderdiversity.com/
- New York City Department of Education (NYCDOE). (2019). Transgender and gender nonconforming student guidelines.
- GLSEN New York State Snapshot from the National School Climate Survey
UNIT 7: CURRICULUM
Class Session 27: Tuesday, December 1st
Latinx Children’s Literature as Resistance
Texts to Engage Before Class:
- Article: García. (2018). En(countering) YA: Young Lords, shadowshapers, and the longings and possibilities of Latinx young adult literature. Latino Studies, 16(2), 230–249. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41276-018-0122-2
- “Girlhood in Latina/o/x Children’s and Young Adult Literature” by Sonia Alejandra Rodríguez
- Book chapter (shared in class on 11/29): Herrera, L. Y., España, C. (2021). Critical translanguaging literacies and Latinx children’s literature: A space for a transformative and liberating pedagogy. In M. T. Sánchez and O. García (Eds.) Transformative translanguaging espacios: Latinx students and their teachers rompiendo fronteras sin miedo. Bristol, UK: Multilingual Matters.
Class Session 28: Thursday, December 6th
Book Club Session One
Texts to Engage Before Class:
Select one or more of the following texts (provided in class on 12/1):
Picture Books:
- Mango, Abuela, and me by Meg Medina, illustrated by Angela Dominguez
- Last Stop on Market Street by Matt de la Peña, illustrated by Christian Robinson
- Milo Imagines the World by Matt de la Peña, illustrated by Christian Robinson
- Octopus Stew by Eric Velasquez
- Radiant Child by Javaka Steptoe
- The Day You Begin by Jacqueline Woodson, illustrated by Rafael López
- Alejandría Fights Back! / La lucha de Alejandria by Leticia Hernández-Linares and the Rise Home Stories Project, illustrated by Rob Liu-Trujillo
Middle Grade:
- Sofía Acosta Makes a Scene by Emma Otheguy
- The Revolution of Evelyn Serrano by Sonia Manzano
- Tight by Torrey Maldonado
Young Adult:
- The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo
- When We Make It by Elisabet Velasquez
- Shadowshaper by Daniel José Older
Adult:
- A cup of water under my bed: a memoir by Daisy Hernández
- The Undocumented Americans by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio
- Children of the Land by Marcelo Hernández Castillo
Class Session 29: Thursday, December 8th
Book Club Session Two
Continue reading from your book selection(s) to prepare for your discussion with the book club.