Dolores Delgado Bernal

Professor

  • Los Angeles CA UNITED STATES
  • University Hall

Department of Educational Leadership and Administration

Contact

Biography

Delgado Bernal was a first-generation college student and an elementary school teacher in Pasadena Unified who earned her Ph.D. from UCLA. She was faculty at the University of Utah for 17 years, and then at Cal State LA she served as chair for the Department of Chicana(o) and Latina(o) Studies and afterwards as Associate Dean for the College of Ethnic Studies. She’s a scholar-activist whose scholarship bridges the fields of education and Chicanx studies and whose passion is in mentoring students. Her scholarship draws from Chicana feminist studies and critical race studies to investigate educational (in)equity, Latinx educational pathways, feminista pedagogies, and different forms of student resistance. She has published over 40 articles/chapters, and has co-authored or co-edited four books. She has received numerous awards for her scholarship, teaching, and/or mentoring, including, the American Educational Research Association Distinguished Scholar Award, Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social Tortuga Award, and Critical Race Studies in Education Association Derrick Bell Legacy Award. Her biggest award is being mamá to three wonderful sons.

Education

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

PhD

Administration, Curriculum, and Teaching Studies

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

Teaching Credential and Multiple Subject Bilingual Crosscultural Language Academic Development (BCLAD)

University of Missouri, Kansas City

MPA

Public Administration, Emphasis: Non-Profit Service Organizations

Show All +

Areas of Expertise

Chicana/Latina Feminist Theories
Ethnic Studies & Femenista Pedagogies
Anti-Racist & Social Justice Education
Chicanx/Latinx Educatonal Pathways
Critical Race Theories, Methodologies & Praxis
Decolonial & Feminist Methodologies

Accomplishments

2023 AERA Fellow

2023-04-03

American Educational Research Association (AERA)

2019 National Prize for Excellence in Mexican American Studies

University of Arizona

2015 Derrick Bell Legacy Award

Critical Race Studies in Education Association

Show All +

Affiliations

  • American Educational Research Association
  • Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social
  • Critical Race Studies in Education Association
  • National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies
  • Oral History Association

Articles

(Re)imagining Transformational Resistance: Seeds of Resistance and Pedagogical Ruptures

Urban Education

Hannegan-Martinez, S., Mendoza Aviña, S., Delgado Bernal, D., & Solorzano, D.G.

in press

Remembering and Revisiting Pedagogies of the Home

American Educational Research Journal, 58(3),567-601

Garcia, N.M. & Delgado Bernal, D.

Almost two decades after Delgado Bernal’s theorization of pedagogies of the home, this article examines pedagogies of the home of four Chicana/o college-educated families to understand the role of parent engagement not only in the college choice processes but also in college completion and graduate school enrollment. Using Chicana feminisms to inform educational oral histories, four Chicana/o parent-child dyads were interviewed. The findings suggest that among Chicana/o college-educated families the (re)making of home, (re)covering tensions, and (re)claiming and (re)learning of cultural knowledge were the pedagogies of the home that were embraced by two successive generations of college completers. Complexities, contradictions, and nuances among Chicana/o college-educated families add to the theorization of pedagogies of the home.

View more

Theorizing Knowledge with Pláticas: Moving Toward Transformative Qualitative Inquiries

Qualitative Inquiry, 27(10), 1213-1220

Flores Carmona, J., Hamzeh, M., Delgado Bernal, D., & Zareer I.H.

In this article, we engaged in pláticas to write about the methodology of pláticas. We show the use of this method by theorizing the pláticas. Our pláticas helped us reveal how we have experienced epistemicide and apartheid of knowledge blocked by epistemological racism in academia. We emphasized how the marginalization and invalidation in academia of this method happens and continues to happen especially in the social sciences. We demonstrate how this method has not been absent, but rather it has not been legitimized in academia. We also show how our refusal to employ dominant epistemologies allows us to move toward transformative qualitative inquiries.

View more

Show All +
Powered by