This book explores the work-life balance of Latina/o students, professors, and staff in higher education. It documents their testimonios, focusing on developing networks and support structures. The book addresses isolation, strategies for balance, and transformative ideologies in colleges of education.
This book explores the work-life balance of Latina/o students, professors, and staff in higher education. It documents their testimonios, focusing on developing networks and support structures. The book addresses isolation, strategies for balance, and transformative ideologies in colleges of education.
Abriendo Puertas, Cerrando Heridas (Opening Doors, Closing Wounds): Latinas/os Finding Work-Life Balance in Academia is the newest book in the series on balancing work and life in the academy.
This volume focuses on the experiences of Latina/o students, professors, and staff/administrators in higher education and documents their testimonios of achieving a sense of balance between their personal and professional lives. In the face of many challenges they are scattered across the country, are often working in isolation of each other and must find ways to develop their own networks, support structures, and spaces where they can share their wisdom, strategize, and forge alliances to ensure collective.
The book focuses on Latinas/os in colleges of education, since many of them carry the important mission to prepare new teachers, and research new pedagogies that have the power of improving and transforming education. Following the format of the work-life balance book series, this volume contains autoethnographical testimonios in its methodological approach. This volume addresses three very important guiding questions
(1) What are the existing structures that isolate/discriminate against Latinas/os in higher education?
(2) How can Latinas/os disrupt these to achieve work-life balance?
(3) Based on their experiences, what are the transformative ideologies regarding Latinas/os seeking work-life balance?
Frank Hernandez, University of Texas of the Permian Basin, USA
Elizabeth Murakami-Ramalho, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA
Gloria M. Rodriguez, UC Davis, USA
Joanne M. Marshall, Iowa State University, USA
Jeffrey S. Brooks, University of Idaho, USA
Bonnie Fusarelli, North Carolina State University, USA
Catherine A. Lugg, Rutgers University, USA
Latish C. Reed, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, USA
George Theoharis, Syracuse University, USA
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