18 results on '"Delma Ramos"'
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2. Mexican origin First-generation College Students Activating Funds of Knowledge to Navigate Basic Needs Insecurity
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Delma Ramos
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Mexican-origin college students ,first-generation college students ,basic needs insecurity ,funds of knowledge ,Social Sciences ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 - Abstract
The present study examines the presence of Basic Needs Insecurity (BNI) among Mexican origin first-generation college students. Specifically, this transformative mixed methods study explores BNI in access to healthcare, housing, employment, and transportation among study participants. Most importantly, this research illuminates students’ Funds of Knowledge (FK) as assets and strategies that Mexican origin first-generation college students activate to navigate BNI. Findings reveal higher levels of BNI present among first-generation compared to continuing-generation college students and highlight familial, community, and institutional supports as sources of FK for Mexican origin first-generation college students to address BNI. Implications for research and practice are provided.
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- 2022
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3. Troubling Hegemonic Racialized Ideologies in Education with Critical Race Theory
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Cathryn B. Bennett and Delma Ramos
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As an epistemological, axiological, and methodological paradigm, Critical Race Theory (CRT; Crenshaw et al., 2000; Harris, 1993) is a scholarly tool to identify and disrupt inequities, possible via CRT's core tenets towards troubling systemic racism. We argue that political movements in North Carolina (NC) exhibit attempts to delegitimize critical race scholarship and curricula that accurately portray history and contemporary student populations' racialized experiences, a manifestation of the conservative agenda to whitewash the state's history that is predicated on racism and white supremacy. In alignment with radical theorizations and research that examine ideologies at the root of ill-informed hysteria, we present a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) of the effects of political power in foreclosing educational possibilities toward building equitable societies through our analysis of data from NC's Fairness and Accountability in the Classroom for Teachers and Students for North Carolinian "FACTS" submissions (Robinson, 2021). FACTS is a reporting tool targeting NC educators who employ critical lenses in their instruction that promotes unfounded antagonism toward CRT. The significance of this research is a localized example of CRT being targeted by conservative politicians toward the intent of delegitimizing critical scholarship and education and thus perpetuating ahistorical ideals rooted in racism and white supremacy.
- Published
- 2024
4. Historically Underrepresented Students Redefining College Success in Higher Education
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Delma Ramos and Brenda Sifuentez
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college success ,student success ,minoritized college students ,underrepresented college students ,historically marginalized populations ,redefining college success ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 - Abstract
Extant definitions of college success largely focus on macro-level academic outcomes including academic achievement, retention, and persistence, which are linked to a limited set of indicators achievable by students including high grade averages, extra-curricular involvement, and leadership that denote a successful college student. These normative ideas of college success sustain ideologies that dismiss the multiplicity of ways students experience success in college and most importantly, they define who can and cannot be characterized as a successful college student. Relatedly, the dominant narrative of college success frames historically underrepresented college students (e.g. first-generation, low-income, students of color) as deficient and as less likely to be successful, even though these students consistently have to overcome greater adversity during their college trajectories and consequently experience many victories that are not legitimized as a success. Therefore, the purpose of this manuscript is to propose a more inclusive definition of the term college success that accounts for the diverse realities of students historically underrepresented and reveals the direct connection between student success and institutional success. Authors draw evidence from two research studies to illustrate their proposed definition of college success and provide implications for research, practice, and policy.
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- 2021
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5. Examining the Inclusivity of Parent and Family College Orientations
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Casandra E. Harper, Judy Marquez Kiyama, Delma Ramos, and David Aguayo
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parents ,families ,friends ,inclusivity language ,logistics ,orientation ,family orientation programs ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
Within higher education, students’ parents and families are representative of more diverse family configurations (Redding, Murphy, & Sheley, 2011) with multiple forms of involvement and engagement. Inclusive programming for college students’ families creates an environment for a range of opportunities to further strengthen familial relationships that are known to contribute to enhanced college transition and success for students (Carney-Hall, 2008; Kiyama & Harper, 2015).
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- 2018
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6. Controlling Images: Institutional Stereotypes of Engagement of Low-Income Families, First-Generation Families, and Families of Color
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Delma Ramos, Judy Marquez Kiyama, and Casandra E. Harper
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higher education ,family engagement ,diversity ,equity ,inclusion ,stereotypes ,Social Sciences ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 - Abstract
This multiple case study examines how higher education institutions utilize controlling images to establish guidelines of family engagement, including that of first-generation families, low-income families, and/or families of color. Family engagement is limited to the extent to which it aligns with controlling images that paint families as overly involved or as uninterested, disengaged, and absent from the college experience of their children. This research contributes to our understanding of institutional responsibility when engaging diverse families. By utilizing controlling images as a framework, the article critically examines the stereotypes ascribed to families that shape their engagement experiences. Institutional, practice-based, and research implications are offered.
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- 2017
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7. Latinx College Students' Strategies for Resisting Imposter Syndrome at Predominantly White Institutions
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Raquel Wright-Mair, Delma Ramos, and Brittany Passano
- Abstract
Traditionally, imposter syndrome is defined as feelings of inferiority regardless of one's accomplishments and experiences. Imposter syndrome is often viewed as an experience that racially minoritized populations in higher education "must" encounter. But these traditional understandings frame imposter syndrome as a personal flaw rather than a product of structural oppression. Consequently, these limited and deficit focused ideas of imposter syndrome urge scholars and practitioners to disrupt normative conceptualizations of imposter syndrome by examining the phenomenon from a structural lens and to expand the literature on the experiences of Latinx college students at PWIs. As such, the purpose of this phenomenological study was to illuminate Latinx students' strategies to cope with imposter syndrome within the hostile and unwelcoming environments of predominantly white institutions. Three major themes emerged from the data: (a) code-switching, (b) consejo de las personas más cercanas, and (c) strategic consciousness: committing to survive the toxicity of imposter syndrome at PWIs; these findings highlight three major ways that Latinx students cope with feelings of imposter syndrome. Implications for future research and practice are outlined to further explore how institutions of higher education can dismantle structures, systems, policies, and procedures that perpetuate imposter phenomenon.
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- 2024
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8. Making the Nuevo South Home: Latinx College Students' Forms of Resistance to Southern Epistemology
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Elsa Camargo, Delma Ramos, Cathryn B. Bennett, Destiny Z. Talley, Terry Chavis, and Brandi Kennedy
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Aligned with critical scholarship and upholding minoritized populations' agency and power, this survey research study addresses Latinx college students' resistance strategies in two Nuevo South states by examining the social issues that students are aware of, engage with, and the nature of their interactions with these issues. We apply Southern epistemology as a framework to center the unique Nuevo South sociopolitical context and examine modern issues Latinx communities face in this geographic region and how Latinx college students resist hostility. Findings empirically establish how the Southern epistemology remains to modernly construct and constrain the lives of Latinx college students in the Nuevo South.
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- 2024
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9. Uncovering the effects of the sociopolitical context of the Nuevo South on Latinx college students’ ethnic identification
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Delma Ramos, Elsa Camargo, Cathryn B. Bennett, and Arianna Alvarez
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Ethnic identification ,Gender studies ,Context (language use) ,Sociology ,Education - Published
- 2022
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10. Plantando Raices en el Nuevo Sur: Mexican-Origin First-Generation College Students’ Transformational Impetus in New Destination States
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Delma Ramos, Elsa Camargo, Cathryn Bennett, and Brandi Kennedy
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Education - Abstract
This study examines Mexican-origin first-generation college students’ (FGCS) transformational impetus within the sociopolitical context of the Nuevo South. Authors investigate transformational impetus through students’ perceptions of knowledge and tools for advocating for equity and social justice in their communities. Results suggest a greater perceived awareness of equity and social justice tools for community uplift among Mexican-origin FGCS than continuing-generation Mexican-origin college students. Implications for research and practice are provided.
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- 2022
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11. Collective achievement and resistance: Understanding the motivations of doctoral women of color
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Delma Ramos and Varaxy Yi
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Latinos latinas ,Graduate students ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,Gender studies ,Ideology ,Women of color ,Psychology ,Social justice ,Feminism ,Education ,media_common - Published
- 2022
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12. Siendo Latinx en el Nuevo South: Defining Identity, Social Justice, and Equity
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Elsa Camargo, Delma Ramos, and Cathryn Bennett
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Education - Published
- 2022
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13. Tying it All Together: Defining the Core Tenets of Funds of Knowledge
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Delma Ramos and Judy Marquez Kiyama
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Core (game theory) ,Funds of knowledge ,Scholarship ,Sociology and Political Science ,Extant taxon ,Tying ,Political science ,Education ,Epistemology - Abstract
Drawing on a synthesis of foundational and extant Funds of Knowledge (fk) scholarship that traces the framework’s theoretical origins and development, this manuscript proposes a unified corpus of s...
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- 2021
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14. Latinx Youth’s Funds of Knowledge: Empowering Activist Identities in a Nuevo South College Access Program
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Cathryn B. Bennett, Rod Wyatt, and Delma Ramos
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Funds of knowledge ,Community engagement ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Self-concept ,050401 social sciences methods ,050301 education ,Public relations ,Education ,Community leadership ,0504 sociology ,Sociology ,business ,0503 education - Abstract
This paper highlights Latinx youth’s community engagement and activist identities during their participation in CHANCE ( Campamento Hispano Abriendo Nuestro Camino a la Educación), a college access program at UNC Greensboro. We examined Latinx youth’s activist identities using critical qualitative inquiry. Findings reveal collective consciousness and responsibility to the Latinx community. Implications and significance for higher education demonstrate how college access pathway programs, such as CHANCE, reinforce Latinx students’ scholar-activist identities.
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- 2020
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15. Conceptualizations of power and agency among members of refugee communities in the state of Colorado
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Molly Sarubbi and Delma Ramos
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Power (social and political) ,State (polity) ,Higher education ,business.industry ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Refugee ,Agency (sociology) ,Public administration ,business ,media_common - Published
- 2020
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16. Doctoral Women of Color Coping with Racism and Sexism in the Academy
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Delma Ramos and Varaxy Yi
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Coping (psychology) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Women of color ,Psychology ,Racism ,Education ,Clinical psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Aim/Purpose: This qualitative study examined the racist and sexist experiences of doctoral women of color in the academy. Background: Doctoral women of color (e.g., Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders, African Americans, Latina Americans, and Native Americans) continue to experience racism and sexism in academic spaces. While few studies have explored the experiences of doctoral students of color and doctoral women of color, with a larger emphasis on how they respond to racism, our study sought to further the knowledge and discourse surrounding the intersectionality of racism and sexism in academic contexts by examining the intersectionality of race and gender systems that impact the lived realities of doctoral women of color as women and people of color. Methodology: This qualitative study employed multiracial feminism and Mellor’s taxonomy of coping styles as theoretical foundations to explore and understand how doctoral women of color experience and navigate racist and sexist incidents. Contribution: The study contributes to research in various areas: (1) it expands our understanding of how doctoral women of color experience racism and sexism, (2) it deepens our perspective about the strategies and methods that they employ to negotiate and overcome these experiences, which can directly inform efforts to support and retain doctoral and other students of color, and (3) it encourages scholars to examine the experiences of doctoral women of color from an anti-deficit approach that acknowledges the social networks, skills, and knowledge that doctoral women of color rely on to disrupt and persist in inequitable contexts as they pursue academic success. Findings: Our findings contribute a classification system that incorporates experiences of doctoral women of color with racism and sexism. Categories in this classification include covert, overt, and physical and material experiences. Our findings also present a classification system that represents navigational strategies of doctoral women of color, or the ways they respond to and overcome racist and sexist experiences. Categories in this classification include defensive, controlled, and direct strategies. Recommendations for Practitioners: First, our findings suggest a critical need for administrators and educators to understand the experiences of women of color and recognize the impact these experiences have on their persistence and success in college. Research on doctoral women of color is limited and very little is known about the entirety of their experiences in graduate programs. This study addresses this gap by exploring how doctoral women of color persist despite the intersectionality of racist and sexist alienation and marginalization. It is important that faculty and staff engage in culturally relevant education and training in order to better understand how to support doctoral women of color as they face these situations. We need more educators who engage in culturally relevant and responsive practices and pedagogy that seek to include their students’ whole identities and lever-age these identities in the classroom. Additionally, more educators need to be trained in ways to recognize and address racist and sexist incidents in their class-rooms and dismantle systems of oppression rather than reinforce them. Specifically, we need to better equip educators to recognize the hard-to-distinguish sexist incidents, which, as our participants suggested, are well concealed within the fabric of our gendered and sexualized society. Second, this study can benefit those in program and resource development to create effective programming and strategies to engage these acts of resilience that enable women of color to succeed in graduate school. Rather than approaching the support and development of doctoral women of color from a deficit perspective of assisting them through challenges, it is more important to fully-engage with these students to recognize what coping strategies they have used that can better inform successful retention programs. Furthermore, mentorship from faculty was highlighted as an important means for participants to address and cope with their negative experiences. Thus, more mentoring relationships between faculty and the student and across student peer groups should be intentionally engaged. This is a system of support also noted in extant literature. As part of the doctoral socialization process, mentoring has many benefits for doctoral students. Specifically, for doctoral women of color, mentoring relationships can be a critical tool for supporting them in managing negative experiences, especially considering that it can minimize feelings of loneliness and isolation. Recommendation for Researchers: Our research contributes to the literature with emphasis on the ways in which doctoral women of color respond to and cope with racism and sexism. Women in this study recount racist and sexist experiences and describe their decision-making processes about how and whether to respond. There were specific reasons that shaped their responses and coping strategies, which highlight awareness and confidence in their individual abilities. The study’s findings also contribute to and expand Mellor’s taxonomy, specifically the incorporation of sexism as a system inherently interlocked with racism. Current literature on doctoral women of color mainly highlights their experience with racism; this gap reinforces our contribution to the literature, specifically, in illuminating predetermined societal roles and expectations for doctoral women of color in academia. Most importantly, our research highlights the assets and agency that doctoral women of color mobilize in the face of racism and sexism. These assets include long-term goals and aspirations, awareness of interlocking systems of oppression shaping their experience in academic environments, commitment to empowering their communities through education, and the support they find within their personal and academic networks. These assets and agency serve as foundation to challenge longstanding deficit perspectives on doctoral women of color in academic spaces and for faculty and program administrators to consider when developing support services. Impact on Society: Our findings encourage faculty, program administrators, and researchers to pay attention to racist and sexist issues as intersecting oppressions rather than distinct manifestations of prejudice to be confronted separately. Our findings also highlight the assets doctoral women of color rely on to overcome oppression and marginalization including their long-term goals and aspirations, awareness of interlocking systems of oppression shaping their experience in academic, commitment to empowering their communities through education, and the support they find within their personal and academic networks. Our hope is that this work encourages systems of higher education to create tangible ways to support doctoral women of color as they grapple with the multiple systems of domination that threaten their success in education, which is intertwined with success in other aspects of society. Future Research: Lastly, future research may explore how the matrix of domination mediates responses of doctoral women of color to racism and sexism. This philosophical inclination is linked to our decision to use Mellor’s taxonomy of coping styles as an introductory framework for our work in understanding navigational strategies. To that end, we argue that the taxonomy as it stands characterizes participants’ responses based on their immediate approach to incidents. This framing fails to include the timing someone might need to process and decide to how to respond. Mellor’s taxonomy positions participants who do not choose to respond immediately as compliant and acquiescent to racialized spaces and events. By doing so, we run the risk of oversimplifying and essentializing the complex processes individuals faced with racism and sexism undertake. At the same time, future research can examine the connection between responses or coping styles and ways that participants are internally transformed in their abilities and desires to address future incidents. There is an inordinate amount of focus on how individuals interact with oppressive incidents and yet very little is known about the ways that these interactions shape future responses. Additionally, the ways that doctoral women of color navigate situations outside the academy is not explored. For example, some of our participants shared how racist and sexist encounters empowered them or inspired them to address other incidents and to interact with family and community members.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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17. Parent and Family Engagement in Higher Education
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Delma Ramos, Casandra E. Harper, Kathy Adams Riester, Judy Marquez Kiyama, David Aguayo, and Laura A. Page
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Higher education ,business.industry ,Pedagogy ,General Medicine ,Family engagement ,Psychology ,business - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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18. Parent and Family Engagement in Higher Education : AEHE Volume 41, Number 6
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Delma Ramos, David Aguayo, Laura A. Page, Kathy Adams Riester, Judy Marquez Kiyama, Casandra E. Harper, Delma Ramos, David Aguayo, Laura A. Page, Kathy Adams Riester, Judy Marquez Kiyama, and Casandra E. Harper
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- Education, Higher--Parent participation
- Abstract
Gain a comprehensive understanding of the role that parents and families play in college students'lives through their involvement starting with K–12, moving through the transition to college, and then focusing on the college experience itself.The authors broaden the conversation to reflect the actual and diverse array of parents and families that play vital roles in students'collegiate experiences. Particular attention is paid to: diverse families, including students of color, first-generation college students, and low-income students, an agenda for more inclusive research, theories, and practices with the goal of broadening the conversation to reflect the diverse array of parent and family engagement, and standards, models, and best practices that might be applied more broadly and modified as needed. As a whole, this volume offers an expanded way of thinking about how higher education understands, engages, and serves the needs of parents and families. This is the 6th issue of the 41st volume of the Jossey-Bass series ASHE Higher Education Report. Each monograph is the definitive analysis of a tough higher education issue, based on thorough research of pertinent literature and institutional experiences. Topics are identified by a national survey. Noted practitioners and scholars are then commissioned to write the reports, with experts providing critical reviews of each manuscript before publication.
- Published
- 2015
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