2016 CUNY Dominican Archives and Library Research Grant
Alejandro E. Carri贸n is currently an Andrew W. Mellon postdoctoral fellow in the Latino & Latina Studies Program at Northwestern University and holds a PhD in Urban Education from the CUNY Graduate Center. He has conducted extensive research on Latino men and education in the U.S., specifically focusing on the transition to college, the development and implementation of bilingual education policy, and the powerful role that habitus鈥攄eeply ingrained psychological and physical ways of being and attitudes towards the social order鈥 plays in shaping the Latino male experience of education. He has worked on numerous programs and committees at CUNY Hostos Community College in the Bronx, NY, and in a variety of educational positions focused on providing college access and educational transition resources to the Latino communities of New York City.Dr. Carri贸n has been at the Dominican Library conducting original research that analyzes young Dominican men鈥檚 pathways in education in the United States. Specifically, he is constructing the first working timeline of Dominican students, parents, teachers, and activists, and their interactions with educational institutions in the United States. Dr. Carri贸n hopes to place the Dominican experience within a larger genealogy of struggles for educational equality. He has also been instrumental in constructing a similar timeline for the CUNY New York State Initiative on Emergent Bilinguals, which traces the development of bilingual education policy.
While discourses around bilingual education in the U.S. have tended to reference and spring from Puerto Rican social movements, Dr. Carri贸n notes that there has been a critically important Dominican influence as well, and feels that broadening the history of Latino education to include Dominicans problematizes and transforms previous genealogies of struggles to expand access to education. There is currently very little academic literature on Dominicans and education in the U.S., and no research on education that treats both Dominican and Puerto Rican cases comparatively, an absence that Dr. Carri贸n鈥檚 work seeks to remedy.
Dr. Carri贸n credits the Dominican Library鈥檚 Sarah Aponte as having been invaluable in guiding his research with her own varied expertise in DR history, such as her knowledge of the history of Dominican women鈥檚 education, which has provided a useful comparative case study to his own work. As he carries out research in the Library he is also looking at the social and political history of the institutionalization of universities within the Dominican Republic, noting that 鈥渢he first institution of higher education in the Americas was founded in the DR, as was one of the first public schools. The institutionalization and social structure of education for Dominicans has a long, important history that should be made available to other students, scholars, and activists.鈥
Last Updated: 08/31/2023 14:05