Fernando Estrada

Associate Professor

  • Los Angeles CA UNITED STATES

Department of Specialized Programs in Professional Psychology

Contact

Biography

Fernando Estrada, Ph.D., contributes actively to the scholarship of college teaching and the personal and academic excellence of under served-under represented minorities. Dr. Estrada is an expert in the areas of masculinity and gender within counseling and educational settings, and specifically with Latino populations. His work has been published in peer-review outlets like Hispanic Higher Education and the Journal of Counseling Psychology. He received a bachelor's degree in psychology from the University of California at San Diego, two master's degrees in counseling psychology from Teachers College at Columbia University, and a doctoral (Ph.D.) degree in counseling psychology from Arizona State University.

Education

Arizona State University

Ph.D.

Counseling Psychology

Teachers College at Columbia University

M.A. and Ed.M.

Counseling Psychology

University of California, San Diego

B.A.

Psychology

Areas of Expertise

Psychology
Counseling
Mental Health
Higher Education

Industry Expertise

Education/Learning

Languages

  • English
  • Spanish

Research Focus

Research Focus

Dr. Estrada’s research interests include masculinity and multicultural education. He currently leads a research team on positive masculinity and psychological health. Dr. Estrada is also active in studying the role of affect in a multicultural context. He incorporates stimulus-response technology to study questions related to multicultural education and counseling.

Courses

EDSP 6365

Research Methodology & Statistics

EDSP 6377

Multicultural Counseling

EDSP 6378

Group Counseling

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Articles

Beyond the seal of biliteracy: The development of bilingual counseling proficiency at the university level.

Multilingual Educator. California Association for Bilingual Education.

Estrada, F., Lavadenz, M., Paynter, M., Ruiz, R.

2018-01-01

The passage of California Assembly Bill 815 (Brownley, Chapter 618, Statutes of 2011) established in 2012 the State Seal of Biliteracy-an officical marker on graduating seniors' high school diplomas, as evidence of high school graduates' attainment of a high level of proficiency in speaking, reading, and writing one or more languages, in addition to English.

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Machismo and higher education: Examining the relation between caballerismo and ethnic identity, support-seeking, and sense of interconnectedness among college Latinos.

Latinos and education

Estrada, F., & Jimenez, P.

2018-02-01

Latino men, part of the nation’s largest and fastest-growing minority group, stand to benefit from new knowledge related to factors that positively influence college persistence. In this study, the investigators examined whether machismo—a multidimensional and gendered social construct—was directly and indirectly associated with three outcomes associated with postsecondary success: connectedness at school, ethnic identity, and support-seeking behavior. Hierarchical moderated regression analysis on data from 140 mainly Mexican American undergraduates partially supported the hypotheses. Implications for college counselors and program coordinators are discussed, along with limitations of the study and areas for future scholarship.

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Brotherhood and College Latinos: A Phenomenological Study

Journal of Hispanic Higher Education

2016-06-27

An understudied topic is the social experiences of college Latinos. In this study, six men shared their experience of brotherhood or hermandad. Individual interviews yielded qualitative data that were subjected to inductive coding resulting in seven descriptive themes conveying the essence of brotherhood. The findings and implications are discussed in light of extant literature. Study limitations precede discussion on future scholarship that is focused on the postsecondary success of a highly underrepresented student population...

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