ABSTRACT
This symposium presents three studies that apply Bridging Multiple Worlds and other complementary theories to analyze how students and families engage their cultural resources to create multiple pathways to academic and life success. The studies focus on individuals from Native Hawaiian, Latinx, immigrant, and low-income backgrounds, groups traditionally marginalized in schools and society. The authors identify educational inequities and innovative ways that were employed to address them and advance social justice. These include efforts by Native Hawaiian educators to integrate Hawaiian culture into their instruction, the Padres Líderes (parent leaders) parent empowerment program, and Integrated Logic Models, a new tool for linking equity research, practice, and evaluation. The authors describe cultural resources that were strengths for students and their families and frame future research, practice, and policies that define academic and life success in ways that are more inclusive of these underserved populations.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Lois A. Yamauchi
Lois A. Yamauchi, PhD, is a professor of education in the Department of Educational Psychology at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. Her research focuses on sociocultural theories, cultural influences on learning, and the experiences of teachers, students, and families from culturally diverse backgrounds.
Catherine R. Cooper
Catherine R. Cooper, PhD, is a research professor of psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, Faculty Director of the UCSC Educational Partnership Center, Research Advisor of the UCSC Hispanic-Serving Institutions Initiatives, and Director of the Bridging Multiple Worlds Alliance.