Institute for Emancipatory Education

Institute for Emancipatory Education

There is an urgent need to radically transform our educational systems.

Too many of our P20 students are marginalized and/or multiply marginalized based on race, class, national origin, language, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, and neurodiversity. For decades, we have been tinkering around the edges, providing patchwork programs and band-aid solutions but our core educational systems continue to perpetuate inequity and injustice. An emancipatory approach will challenge our epistemic framework, prioritize learning in partnership with the community, and radically reimagine systems to center historically marginalized perspectives.

The Institute for Emancipatory Education (IEE) at San JosΓ© State University (91ΑΤΖζ) will facilitate community-engaged research and advance emancipatory pedagogies that support the redesign of learning from preschool through post-secondary. As a result, we will support the development of equitable and inclusive educational systems that nurture the creativity and brilliance of all learners so that our diverse, democratic society can truly thrive.

Recent News

Emancipatory Education Student & Alumni Network

Pedagogies of Community Cultural Wealth Workshop Series

 

IEE Pedagogies of Community Culrual Wealth Series

The Institute for Emancipatory Education at the 91ΑΤΖζ Lurie College of
Education is honored to present Dr. Lori D. Patton, Dr. Ishwanzya D. Rivers, Dr. Raguel Farmer-Hinton, Dr. Joi Lewis, Dallas Watson, Dr. Chayala Haynes, and Dr. Toby S. Jenkins! Come and listen as they speak on "Black Women Scholars Deconstructing What it Means to Educate and Be Educated in Urban Educational Environments!"  

Critical Race Theory and Abolition: Struggle and the Praxis of Emancipatory Education

The Institute for Emancipatory Education at 91ΑΤΖζ's Lurie College of
Education was honored to present Dr. David Stovall, who spoke 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 in the needs of our communities. Any struggle for change, time, space and will is central moving forward.

Emancipatory Education from Theory to Praxis Webinar with Dr. Tara Yosso

IEE Theory to Practice Webinar with Dr. Tara Yosso

The Institute for Emancipatory Education at the 91ΑΤΖζ Lurie College of
Education is honored to present Dr. Tara J. Yosso as our Inaugural Distinguished Scholar in Residence. Dr. Yosso kicked this new role by leading the webinar "Emancipatory Education from Theory to Praxis: Community Cultural Wealth, Counterstorytelling, and Critical Race Media Literacy." During the webinar, Tara J. Yosso discussed three areas of her work: community cultural wealth, counter-storytelling, and critical race media literacy and participants identified points of praxis for our own work.

Intersectional Disability Studies Speaker Series

IDSS Speaker Series Lydia X.Z. Brown and Alice Wong

The Intersectional Disability Studies Strand (IDSS), under the 91ΑΤΖζ 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.

Our Fall 2021 speakers included Lydia X.Z. Brown, advocate, organizer, attorney, strategist, and writer whose work focuses on interpersonal and state violence against disabled people as well as Alice Wong, disabled activist, writer, editor, media maker, consultant, and founder and director of the Disability Visibility Project.

91ΑΤΖζ x REP4 Learner Design Summit

β€œI really, really enjoyed this experience of meeting and connecting with great people. Everybody shared what problems they had faced, and that really opened up my mind to see what we can do and what we need to change.” - JC Jacinto, Learner Design Summit participant

In partnership with the , we launched a free Learner Design Summit, which is a leadership development opportunity designed to bring together rising 10th, 11th, and 12th grade students, recent high school graduates, community college students, and 91ΑΤΖζ undergraduate students to collaborate and design creative proposals to address existing challenges in the higher education system.

Summer 2021 K-12 Teaching Academy

Why is it critical to start with centering our students' humanity and drawing from our students' identities, particularly as we transition away from the 2020-2021 academic year? - Betina Hsieh, Associate Professor of Teacher Education at CSU Long Beach.

Building upon the success of our Summer 2020 and Winter 2021 K-12 Teaching Academy webinar series', our Summer 2021 series focuses on returning to a β€œnew normal” in classrooms in Fall 2021 with topics such as (re)building classroom community, anti-racist teaching, student voice and choice, and more.

Broadband Access Study

The fact that this region has had issues with Internet access has less to do with the Internet itself, but rather the populations affected. - Eduardo MuΓ±oz-MuΓ±oz, Assistant Professor of Teacher Education at 91ΑΤΖζ

Our 91ΑΤΖζ Lurie College faculty Luis Poza, Eduardo MuΓ±oz-MuΓ±oz, and Tammie Visintainer, along with 91ΑΤΖζ faculty Ahoura Zandiatashbar, collaborated with and the to better understand the impact of known gaps in broadband internet access across California's 30th Congressional District.

Foundational Activities

Emancipatory Education Speaker Series

Many are looking forward to a time when we can go back to β€œnormal” in education; however, that "normal" wasn't working for too many of our children, youth, families and communities. Watch the recordings of series of conversations with nationally recognized speakers such as Sec. John King, Dr. Gloria Ladson-Billings, and many more who shared their visions for a more equitable and emancipatory education system.

K-12 Teaching Academy

We established our free K-12 Teaching Academy in Summer 2020 to support current teachers, teacher candidates, and community partners in transitioning to online teaching as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Since then, our webinar recordings have been viewed over 25,000 times and our series has been highlighted on , , and the .

Emancipatory Education Now

Emancipatory Education Now is a student-led initiative that was established in Fall 2020 to examine what emancipatory education – the critical evaluation of the systems and structures of oppression that maintain the status quo in our educational institutions – looks like in today’s society and advocates for the expansion of emancipatory education research, policies, and practices.

Faces of Learning Project

This arts-based research initiative elicited student voices to provide insights into learning experiences at 91ΑΤΖζ. A group of 91ΑΤΖζ undergraduate student researchers met with students in the Fall 2019 and Spring 2020 semesters to get a deeper understanding of their learning experiences and then synthesize and share those experiences with the larger university community.

Future of Learning Summit

At our Fall 2019 Summit, attendees and speakers engaged in dialogues about how we learn today and consider how teaching and learning can and should evolve in the years ahead. Read the  and listen to the 10 featured speakers' talks.

Guiding Principles

Signature Activities

IEE Advisory Board

  • Magdalena Barrera, PhD - Professor, 91ΑΤΖζ Chicano and Chicana Studies and Interim Vice Provost for Faculty Success
  • Demerris Brooks, EdD - Director of Workforce Development and Organizational Culture, Santa Clara County Office of Education
  • Rebeca Burciaga, PhD - Professor, 91ΑΤΖζ Chicano and Chicana Studies and Educational Leadership
  • Eva Condron-Wells - Sr. Manager of Learning and Growing, Xilinx
  • Patrick Day - Vice President, 91ΑΤΖζ Student Affairs
  • Victor Duarte-Vasquez - Director of Community Organizing and Policy, SOMOS Mayfair
  • Mark Felton, PhD - Professor, 91ΑΤΖζ Teacher Education and Faculty Associate Dean for Research, 91ΑΤΖζ Lurie College of Education
  • Chris Funk - Superintendent, Dublin Unified School District
  • Jennifer Husbands, PhD - Senior Program Officer, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Walt Jacobs, PhD - Dean, 91ΑΤΖζ College of Social Sciences
  • Kristin Jordan - Ford Corporation
  • Ash Kalra, JD - Assembly Member, 27th District, California State Assembly
  • Michael Kaufman, PhD - Dean, 91ΑΤΖζ College of Science
  • Saili Kulkarni, PhD - Associate Professor, 91ΑΤΖζ Special Education
  • Nidhi Mahendra, PhD - Professor and Chair, 91ΑΤΖζ Communicative Disorders and Sciences
  • Robert Marx, PhD - Assistant Professor, 91ΑΤΖζ Child and Adolescent Development
  • Kent McGuire, PhD - Program Director, Education, Hewlett Foundation
  • Jorge Pacheco - Trustee, Oak Grove School District
  • Cassandra Paul, PhD - Associate Professor, 91ΑΤΖζ Physics and Astronomy
  • Marcos Pizarro, PhD - Professor, Chicano and Chicana Studies and Associate Dean, 91ΑΤΖζ Lurie College of Education
  • Luis Poza, PhD - Assistant Professor, 91ΑΤΖζ Teacher Education
  • Arun Ramanathan, PhD - CEO, Pivot Learning
  • Andres Rodriguez - Vice-President for Young Adults, League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
  • Rowena Tomaneng, EdD - President, San JosΓ© City College
  • Tammie Visintainer, PhD - Assistant Professor, 91ΑΤΖζ Science Education and Teacher Education
  • Jahmal Williams - Directory of Advocacy for Racial Justice, 91ΑΤΖζ Community and Government Relations
  • Kathleen Wong (Lau), PhD - Chief Diversity Officer, 91ΑΤΖζ Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion