Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Room
Browse By Unit
Browse By Session Type
Search Tips
Visiting Washington, D.C.
Personal Schedule
Sign In
X (Twitter)
4:05 to 5:35pm
Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Room 155
In Symposium: "First-Generation" Faculty of Color in Higher Education: Voicing Silenced Narratives in Academe
Discussant
10:35am to 12:05pm
Marriott Marquis, Floor: Level Two, Marquis Salon 9
In Symposium: Critical Race Theory and the Spatial Analysis: Cases of Praxis to Disrupt Racial Injustice
On Session Paper: Ground-Truthing: Geographic Information System as a Community-Based and Antiracist Praxis
Presenting Author
4:05 to 5:35pm
Marriott Marquis, Floor: Level Two, Marquis Salon 16
In Symposium: AnzaldĂșa, DuBois, and Bell: Examining Oppression and Resistance Within and Beyond the Latina/o Pipeline
Chair
10:35am to 12:05pm
Marriott Marquis, Floor: Level Four, Supreme Court
In Symposium: Advancing Critical Race Theory in Educational Quantitative Methods
Chair
10:35am to 12:05pm
Marriott Marquis, Floor: Level Four, Supreme Court
In Symposium: Advancing Critical Race Theory in Educational Quantitative Methods
On Session Paper: Degrees With "Value": A Critical Race Critique on the Discourse of "Value" in Latina/o Degree Attainment
Presenting Author
7:45 to 9:15am
Marriott Marquis, Floor: Level Two, Marquis Salon 16
In Symposium: Segregating Chicana/o Students: Critical Race Historical Perspectives on the Continued Unconstitutionality of Local Education Policy
Discussant
2:45 to 4:15pm
Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 201
In Invited Speaker Session: Public Scholarship and Public Education in a Time of Civil Unrest
On Session Paper: A Critical Race Theory Analysis of Racial Violence and Resistance on College Campuses
Presenting Author
4:30 to 6:00pm
Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Exhibit Hall D Section B
In Event: Roundtable Session 49
In Roundtable Session: Latino Social Justice Spaces
On Roundtable Presentation: Visualizing Everyday Racism: Critical Race Theory, Visual Microaggressions, and the Historical Image of Mexican Banditry
Presenting Author