“People Are Demanding Justice”: Pandemics, Protests, and Remote Learning Through the Eyes of Immigrant Youth of Color

Author:

Fine Michelle1ORCID,Finesurrey Samuel2,Rodriguez Arnaldo3,Almonte Joel4,Contreras Alondra5,Lam Aidan6,Cruz Ashley,Contreras Alondra,Ramírez Ariana Peña,Mendoza Brandon,Almonte Joel,Lam Aidan,Savinon Siarra,Campbell Noah,Hiraldo Jesslin,Santos Lauren,Bruno Samantha,Victoria Alyssa,Columna Noel,Pabon Naomi,Laporte Mya,Paulino Sheylany,Boissier Nathan

Affiliation:

1. The Graduate Center–City University of New York, USA

2. City University of New York, USA

3. School in the Square Middle School, Washington Heights, New York

4. Frank McCourt High School, New York City

5. Facing History High School, New York City

6. Environmental Studies High School, New York City

Abstract

This paper examines a youth oral history project conducted by/with/for immigrant youth of color and educators. Designed as a longitudinal five year project of critical participatory action research and youth oral histories, we sought initially to document generational experiences of schooling inequity, aggressive policing, housing precarity and immigration struggles. As a research collective we then confronted and chose to interrogate how COVID19, uprisings and activism, and remote learning affect youth of color. In our analysis we “discovered” the power of culturally responsive and sustaining education as a framework to cultivate critical consciousness and civic engagement. With an epistemic commitment to “no research on us without us,” decolonizing methodologies and research for social action, we review in this article our theoretical frameworks, epistemic commitments, methodologies, our ethical praxis and our evidence-based activism, as we explore the intimate details of critical participation as core to anti-racist developmental science.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Developmental and Educational Psychology

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