Biography
Yosso is a first generation college student who grew up in San Jose, CA. She earned herSelected publications
Yosso's dissertation, ''A Critical Race and LatCrit Approach to Media Literacy: Chicana/o Resistance to Visual Microaggressions,'' linked racial microaggressions, stereotype threats, the intersectionality of racialization for Latina/o students, and film portrayals. Her operationalization of racial microaggressions has become part of handbook definitions of racial microaggressions. Her 2009 ''Harvard Educational Review'' article positions this analysis of microaggressions alongside a critique of the assimilationist models utilized in higher education student affairs, shedding new light on campus racial climate and Chicana/o, Latina/o educational experiences. Her operationalization of mundane racism in subsequent publications (e.g. “A Few of the Brightest, Cleanest Mexican Children” (''Harvard Educational Review'') expands our understanding of why and how Mexican Americans persist as the most segregated children in the nation’s schools. Yosso's unique contribution to developing a critical race theory in the education framework engages research-based creative narratives—counterstories—that recount racially and socially marginalized perspectives. Her co-authored publications describe how a counter storytelling methodology can illuminate educational experiences both individual and shared. Her 2006 book, ''Critical Race Counter stories along the Chicana/Chicano Educational Pipeline''. applied this method to examine Chicana/o experiences navigating from elementary through graduate school, embedding critical conceptual and theoretical content within an accessible counter narrative format. She challenges deficit interpretations of dismal academic statistics with composite characters who personify data themes and patterns. In 2008 the American Educational Studies Association awarded ''Critical Race Counter stories along the Chicana/Chicano Educational Pipeline'' the Critic's Choice Award. Her article, “Whose Culture has Capital? A Critical Race Theory Discussion of Community Cultural Wealth” published in 2005 has been received as a paradigm shift in the framing of work with marginalized communities around the array of cultural knowledge, skills, abilities, and networks they possess and utilize to survive and resist racism and other forms of subordination. The article questions deficit interpretations of Pierre Bourdieu and cultural capital theory. Bourdieu astutely argues that social hierarchy is not reproduced by chance, but rather that those in power (elite Whites) restrict access to acquire and utilize specific forms of cultural, social, and economic capital. Through a deficit lens, however, Bourdieu’s critique of how hierarchy reproduces itself is utilized as a ‘how-to’ model, wherein Students of Color need to acquire the appropriate cultural capital or social capital to achieve academically. Yosso's article argues that shifting our lens away from a deficit view of Communities of Color, and considering their experiences in a critical historical light, we can document various forms of capital nurtured through cultural wealth including aspirational, navigational, social, linguistic, familial and resistant capital. These forms of capital draw on the knowledge Students of Color bring with them from their homes and communities into the classroom.” Yosso's model community cultural wealth has become the impetus for a range of national and international projects centered on the cultural knowledge and assets in Communities of Color.Selected work
* Solórzano, D.G. & T.J. Yosso. (2002). “Critical Race Methodology: Counter storytelling as an Analytical Framework for Educational Research.” ''Qualitative Inquiry'' 8(1), 23–44 * Solórzano, D.G., M. Ceja, & T.J. Yosso. (2000, Winter/Spring). “Critical Race Theory, Racial Microaggressions, and Campus Racial Climate: The Experiences of African American College Students.” ''Journal of Negro Education'' 69(1/2), 60–73 * Yosso, T.J. & D.G. García. (2007). “‘This is No Slum!’: A Critical Race Theory Analysis of Community Cultural Wealth in Culture Clash’s Chavez Ravine.” '' Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies'' 32(1), 145–179 * García, D.G., & T.J. Yosso. (2013). “‘Strictly in the Capacity of Servant’: The Interconnection Between Residential and School Segregation in Oxnard, California, 1934-1954.” ''History of Education Quarterly'' 53(1), 64–89 * Yosso, T.J., W.A. Smith, M. Ceja, & D.G. Solórzano. (2009, Winter). Critical Race Theory, Racial Microaggressions, and Campus Racial Climate for Latina/o Undergraduates. ''Harvard Educational Review'' 79(4), 659–690 * Yosso, T.J. (2002). “Critical Race Media Literacy: Challenging Deficit Discourse about Chicanas/os.” ''Journal of Popular Film and Television'' 30(1), 52–62 * Yosso, T.J. & D.G. García. (2010). “From Ms. J. to Ms. G.: Analyzing Racial Microaggressions in Hollywood’s Urban School Genre.” In, B. Frymer, T. Kashani, A.J. Nocella II, & R. Van Heertum (eds.). ''Hollywood’s Exploited: Public Pedagogy, Corporate Movies, and Cultural Crisis'' (pp. 85–103). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. * Yosso, T.J. & C. Benavides Lopez. (2010). “Counter spaces in a Hostile Place: A Critical Race Theory Analysis of Campus Culture Centers.” In, L.D. Patton (Ed.). ''Culture Centers in Higher Education: Perspectives on Identity, Theory, and Practice'' (pp. 83–104) Sterling, VA: Stylus. * Smith, W.A., T.J. Yosso, & D.G. Solórzano. (2006). “Challenging Racial Battle Fatigue on Historically White Campuses: A Critical Race Examination of Race-Related Stress.” In, C.A. Stanley (Ed.). ''Faculty of Color: Teaching in Predominantly White Colleges and Universities'' (pp. 299–327). Bolton, MA: Anker Publishing, Inc. * Yosso, T.J. & D.G. Solórzano. (2005). “Conceptualizing a Critical Race Theory in Sociology.” In, M. Romero & E. Margolis (eds.), ''The Blackwell Companion to Social Inequalities'' (pp. 117–146). Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing. * García, D.G., T.J. Yosso, & F.P. Barajas. (2012). “‘A Few of the Brightest, Cleanest Mexican Children’: School Segregation as a Form of Mundane Racism in Oxnard, CA, 1900-1940,” ''Harvard Educational Review'' 82(1), 1–25. *Yosso, Tara J. (2005). "Whose culture has capital? A critical race theory discussion of community cultural wealth" (PDF). Race Ethnicity and Education. 8 (1): 69–91. doi:10.1080/1361332052000341006. S2CID 34658106.References
External links