Updated: August 4th, 2005
2000-01 Bilingual Fellows |
| UC
Davis |
UC
Los Angeles |
UC
Santa Barbara |
| Carmina
Brittain |
Hector
H. Alvarez |
Grace
Ellen Santarelli |
| Matthew
Bronson |
Anastasia
Aimee Amabisca |
Jill
Leafstedt |
| Ann
Go |
|
Ted
Polanco |
| Dianna
Gutierrez |
Lisa
Celaya |
Marisol
Rodarte-Venegas |
| Julie
Maxwell-Jolly |
Carl
Alexander Lager |
Nereyda
Hurtado |
| Emilio
Soltero |
Kathyrn
Perry Olson |
Ralph
Cordova |
| |
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Mira
Pak |
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Anita
Revilla |
|
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Jamy
Stillman |
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Simeon
Stumme |
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UC Santa Barbara
| Maria
J. Alvarez-Chamorro
I am the daughter of two extremely supportive
Spanish-speaking Mexican immigrants who received less than three
years of formal education and have spent their lives as migrant workers
in the agricultural fields of California. Despite their limited
educational background, my parents taught me how to read in Spanish by
the time I was four years old. With Spanish literacy as my educational
basis, I eventually graduated from UCLA with a BA in Psychology/Women's
Studies, became a bilingual teacher in South Central Los Angeles, and
after teaching for five years became convinced that the socio-emotional
needs of low SES immigrant and minority children are extremely neglected
within public education. Thus, I am presently pursuing a doctoral
degree in Counseling, Clinical, School Psychology in order to help create
and disseminate new knowledge which will, I hope, facilitate appropriate
socio-emotional educational interventions with these populations.
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| Gabrielle
Anderson
My long term goal is to serve
language minority children as a school psychologist. Growing up in a diverse
community in San Diego, many of my peers were English Language Learners
and were the children of immigrants. During my undergraduate career at
UC Berkeley I served as a research assistant at San Francisco General
Hospital working with Spanish-speaking immigrants who were suffering from
Major Depression. I was also active in the Berkeley schools conducting
media awareness workshops and tutoring sixth graders through the Break
The Cycle Program. After graduating from UC Berkeley in 1995, I
spent four years in the Teach For America Program teaching bilingual fifth
grade in Pasadena, California and assisting the Long Beach Unified School
District with School psychology research. I selected UC Santa Barbara
for my graduate studies because of the faculty and student commitment
to meeting the needs of minority children and their communities.
|
[No Photo
On File] |
| Maria
K. Denney
Over the past decade,
Maria K. Denney has demonstrated a dedicated commitment to the Latino
population in the Fields of Communication and Special Education.
Before returning to graduate school, Maria developed and provided Early
Intervention services at Santa Barbara Cottage Children's Hospital to
Latino families and their premature infants and children at risk or with
disabilities. Maria is a third year doctoral student in Educational
Psychology with an emphasis in Human Development and Disability at the
Graduate School of Education at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Maria is a Graduate Research Assistant to Drs. George and Joanne Singer
on The Family Centered Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Model Demonstration
Project for Young Children with Disabilities.
Maria received a Bachelors Degree in
Spanish from the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at U.C.S.B. in 1989.
After graduation, Maria was a Research Associate for Dr. Federico Subervi-Velez
and Dr. Juan Vicente Palerm at the Center for Chicano Studies at U.C.S.B.
to assist the State of California to communicate with the State of California's
Spanish-speaking population during emergencies.
Maria's Masters Thesis examines Mexican
parents' beliefs and goals of infant care and development for their premature
and low birth weight infants. Her research interests are grounded
in the experiences of immigrant families with children at risk or with
disabilities, bilingual language development and Early Intervention.
|
[No Photo
On File] |
| Natasha
Henley
I am a first year graduate student pursuing
a masters and a credential in School Psychology. Although I was
born in Los Angeles, I have spent many summers visiting relatives in Central
America as well as traveling to South America. These experiences, as well
as my ability to speak Spanish led me to want to work with immigrant English
language learners. After graduating from U.C. Berkeley, I worked
for the Los Angeles Unified School District as a bilingual elementary
school teacher for 3 ½ years, while earning a BCLAD multiple subject
teaching credential through the L.A.U.S.D.'s District Intern Program.
It was there as a teacher that I saw that Limited English Proficient students
were suffering waiting extended periods of time to see a bilingual school
psychologist.
My desire after graduating is to work
with these students and their parents in order to give them equal access
to quality education. |
[No Photo
On File] |
| Mari
Elena Minjarez
I am a second year PhD student in the
Clinical/Counseling/School Psychology program with an emphasis in School
Psychology and Interdisciplinary Human Development. Currently, I
am evaluating the PASS program in Ventura that focuses on alternatives
to suspension for middle school students. In addition, I am in the
process of helping the Fighting Back program in Santa Barbara write a
proposal to receive funding for a Latina Mentoring program. I am
also working as a school psychology intern at both Santa Ynez High School
and El Puente Continuation High School in Santa Barbara. At both
of these sites, I have the great opportunity of working with diverse populations
and researching alternative assessment tools that are culturally and linguistically
appropriate. I am most interested in working with at-risk students
that are struggling with the impact of limited language proficiency and
cultural discrimination and segregation.
After obtaining my PhD, I plan to work
as a School Psychologist and eventually go on to an administrative position.
At that level, I hope to focus on implementing school programs that cater
to the needs of the diverse population in California. I am very
proud to be a recipient of the Bilingual Fellowship and a member of the
group of students receiving this award. We will make a great impact
on the future of our children. |
[No Photo
On File] |
| Nancy
O'Rode
I am currently pursuing a doctoral
degree in the Educational Psychology program at UC Santa Barbara and am
serving as a graduate researcher with Project PRIME, a Local Systemic
Change Initiative mathematics reform project in Oxnard, California. Project
PRIME's goal is to double the number of minority students in advanced
mathematics courses. The project fosters a strong parent network and encourages
parents to
take a leadership role at their children's schools.
My Master's Thesis examined the problem-solving
and mental computation strategies of language-minority and English-speaking
students using widely divergent mathematics curricula in two school districts.
Students experiencing the mathematics reform curriculum, even though it
is more language intensive, showed considerably better facility with mental
computation tasks than students in a more traditional curriculum. This
work was presented in a paper I gave at the American Educational Research
Association meeting in Montreal last April.
I have a California teaching credential
and have taught middle school bilingual science courses as well as mathematics
classes at the elementary, middle, and high school levels. My husband
and I have been fortunate to experience the cultures of the Pacific Islands,
Spain, and Africa while teaching overseas for many years. |
|
| Beth
Yeager
Beth Yeager is a 5th grade teacher at
McKinley Elementary School in Santa Barbara as well as a doctoral student
in Teaching and Learning in the Graduate School of Education, UCSB.
She has been working with linguistically diverse students at both the
preschool level and the upper intermediate level for all of her teaching
career, including 27 years as a bilingual teacher in a bilingual classroom.
Having been involved in a research partnership
as a teacher with the Santa Barbara Classroom Discourse Group at UCSB
for 9 years, she is now eagerly and actively pursuing and advanced degree
that will allow her to further explore the issues of diversity and equity
of access to academic curriculum.
|
[No Photo
On File] |
UCLA
| Kimberly
Barraza Lawrence
After having lived and studied in Spain
and Mexico, I began my career as an elementary bilingual instructor
and have spent the last five years as a secondary foreign language teacher.
While teaching Spanish in Orange County, I helped to organize second
language learning camps for high school students and was recognized
as the county's outstanding foreign language teacher. I have also been
involved with teacher mentoring through U.C. Irvine's Project COACH
and, through COACH, have helped to pilot communicative classroom projects.
These projects have come together in a teacher manual of interactive
lessons for the Spanish classroom, entitled Todo lo mio.
Now, as a first year Ph.D candidate
in the Urban Schooling division of UCLA's Graduate School of Education,
I hope to further investigate various bilingual education constructs
and the impact second language learners have on the instructional methodologies
in all content areas. |
|
| Mariana
Pacheco
Mariana Pacheco has just begun a Ph.D.
program in the Division of Urban Schooling in the Graduate School of
Education & Information Studies at UCLA. Her interest in education
is in understanding the educational experiences of Latino English Language
Learners in California. She is planning to conduct research that will
positively impact the quality of opportunity and help ensure equal access,
at all levels, for Latino students. She has spent the last several
years teaching. In the spring of '97, she received her bilingual
teaching credential and M.Ed. at UCLA. Having been a product of
Bilingual Education herself, she chose to teach in a second grade bilingual
classroom for two years and held a bilingual reading teacher position
for one year. |
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