“We’re Not Going to Overcome Institutional Bias by Doing Nothing”: Latinx/a/o Student Affairs Professionals as Advocates for Equity
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Latinx/a/o Student Affairs Administrators
2.2. Private University Environmental Contexts
3. Conceptual Framework
4. Methodology
4.1. Data Analysis
4.2. Positionality
4.3. Limitations
5. Findings
5.1. The Parameters of Agency
5.1.1. May: Working in Elite Spaces as Resistance
There’s just this hesitancy, or just this lack of awareness that happens. So … oftentimes, institutions are coping at the same time as their populations are on campus, which does more harm than good, and makes students feel like they’re just a pawn, and they’re there to educate the institution as opposed to the institution [educating them].
There was just a lot of racial tensions on campus, a lot of policing, a lot of the institution questioning my intentions when … I’m the type of person who just does my job. But at some point in time, the president and the senior administrator felt threatened by the work that I was doing, and wanted me to silence students in different ways in which I did not feel comfortable doing. Ultimately, I didn’t do it.
5.1.2. Ruby: You’ve Never Had to Navigate White Patriarchal Society
I was starting to feel really pigeon-holed in that work … as like, ‘Of course! You’re Latina, so you run a multicultural center’ sort of pigeon-holing. I really started to feel like folks didn’t look at me as I could do much else. [T]here were no opportunities for me to move up at my current institution. Or, if there were, I guess they didn’t think it was for me. We’ll say that.
…too many people without that lens sitting at dean, assistant and associate dean, and higher positions … and aren’t thinking critically about those issues when they come up. Or, even when they don’t come up. We [Latinx/as/os] need to be the ones that bring them up sometimes.
‘[T]his is how you work with difficult students’. Or, ‘These are some of the things to look for in your classroom. Every student on campus is going to have a faculty member. They may never darken my door, they may never join a club, or organization, we may never see the student, but they’re always going to have a faculty member. That’s why you’re so important, because if you notice something going on with a student then you can tell us. And we can try and help. You can try and help too as a faculty member’.
We’re all learning, all of the time. I was there one time too, and I had to learn. [C]ertainly you don’t always have to be the person doing that [equity] work. I mean, you need a day off too like everybody else, and you need self-care, and so do I. Those are the days that I text my friends or send an email to the people I trust to be like, ‘I cannot believe this thing happened in my life. What do you think?’ You know, get that validation from folks like, ‘Yeah, you’re not crazy. That is terrible that that happened’. Like, great, I can go on with my day. Bad things are going to happen to you at work sometimes. You’re going to bump up against someone who’s a jerk.
Because I grew up in an urban environment with Black and Latino people, I have had to learn over the years how to navigate in a white patriarchal society to be where I am in the world. But, [white people have] never had to learn how to get along with Black people, right? So, … I get a pass from students … like, ‘Okay, she gets me’. Students ain’t going to trust nobody right away, I don’t care who you are. But, they’re going to be like, ‘Oh, all right. [S]he gets it. Oh, she understands’. But, in such a way that … the white administrators just can’t do it. [T]hey never had to learn that.
5.2. Racialized Boundaries of Power
5.2.1. Maria: I Can’t Always Piece Race, Ethnicity, and Gender Apart
…the smaller liberal arts, undergraduate enterprise is really where I am at my best, just because it is a smaller, tighter knit community and … I feel where my strengths lie is in relationship building, and I think that is particularly important in small places.
I cannot always piece those things apart, but I feel quite convinced that as a finalist for some of these Dean of Students roles, … the feedback from the department was … around my voice being too strong for the voice of a woman and that was unclear to me on how that overlaps with being Latina as well, … but ultimately, I felt like I needed to alter … my appearance in order to be heard as professional and be given the opportunity that I wanted….
…the capacity to live authentically personally and professionally is too important and the message that I think that I carry it’s too important for it not to be a part of my narrative and a part of the way that I do my work.
5.2.2. Audrey: I Am an Advocate but Not an Expert
… an outsider to them. I’m not someone who’s part of their … familia…. I don’t know when this shift happened, but it’s been very hard for me, especially because I was a part of those groups, [and] I can’t come back and have that sense of community … with those populations. I have learned to work around that. I’ve learned to accept it…. We talk about how our students consider themselves as social justice warriors, and they think they’re experts when we know they’re not. They have experiences that hold value in what they share and what they voice, but anyone who opposes or even has a sense of questioning is considered a non-expert and not worthy of their time.
Being at the table, I was very proud that I was able to challenge a VP and [say], ‘You need to reconsider [cutting this program]. We highlight these programs … in our [admissions] packets that highlight … how proud we are of our diverse programs but yet you’re trying to do this to fit a few more bodies on campus. This demonstrates to me that the college is not committed to the mission’. That took that VP’s breath away … I was the only one saying that to that person. That space was the right space to say that.
I think that was one of my proudest moments that I was able to have the energy, to have the confidence to do that … and be like, ‘No, I’m not going to stand for that. We need to be more supportive of our … programs…’. [W]hen I do speak up, I think I am listened to. Whether it offends people sometimes or in that one instance, it offended [the vice provost] … I’m starting a conversation that no one was wanting to have.
5.2.3. Raul: Defying Those in Power
[S]tudent affairs people help build those communities and help manage those communities and make sure they exist not just for students now, but they exist for students in the future, and … that kind of drew me … to the profession and also informs the work that I do now and the way that I do it….
…a ton of politics here and so … we don’t always get to do … what’s best for our students. We sometimes have to do what’s best for … people up at the top that make a lot of money and are removed from … the day to day of what’s happening here with the students on campus and so that’s a lot of bullshit that we have to deal with….
I [was] called into the office … just for them to give me shit about [a social justice program]. They didn’t say … not [emphasis added] to do the program but, ‘We don’t like it’, and I said, ‘Okay, well, I’m going to keep doing it and you’re going to keep not liking it and we can move on from there’. So … I’m going to keep doing what I want to do unless someone literally tells me that I can’t do it and they just happen to be my supervisor but other than that I just keep doing what I do … because I think it’s important … and, by the way, the students keep turning out for this program, so there’s clearly a need for it.
[Those in power] don’t need proof, you don’t need arguments, you don’t need reasons, you don’t need anything, all you need is power because when you have the ability to decide then it doesn’t matter. You can just say, ‘Nah, I don’t think that’s right. [Social justice programming] doesn’t feel right, so it doesn’t matter, even if students like it. [T]hey might like it, but it’s not good for them’ and that’s what happens too often, and people that have power but don’t understand [the importance of equity work], they wield that.
I work almost exclusively with white people, and they come from a variety of backgrounds themselves.… I don’t know if any of them understand what it means to be poor, per say…. I’m not aware of any of them being first-generation college students. [T]hey don’t ask a lot of questions, I’ll say that much. I don’t know if that’s just being polite or being uninterested …[and] it’s not like I offer up a whole lot either.… I have to do the explaining to people about what it’s like [to be poor or first-gen] and draw from my own experiences and share that. Sometimes that’s valued, sometimes I don’t think it is, but … it doesn’t come natural to the folks here to talk about that.
I’ve got to be excellent at convincing people about things that I think they don’t already agree with, and I can’t be just okay. I can’t be good. I have to be excellent because my arguments have to be so strong if I’m sharing a different perspective because otherwise it’s seen as an opinion and it’s not seen as valued….
…having that diverse perspective at a table where decisions are being made or being in a place where I am to make decisions is really valuable…. I’m in a position where I have a certain amount of decision-making ability and certainly … my background experience … history, heritage … form the decisions that I make. [W]hen I feel like I am one at a table of like six or seven … I do my best, but oftentimes … you can’t get the room to move in the way that I think it should, but when I’m the one making those kinds of decisions, I don’t have that type of problem.
[I]f you do this job selflessly then you end up getting a lot out of it, but if you do the job trying to get a lot out of it, [i]t just doesn’t work that way…. [T]his is the kind of job you say, ‘I’m going to make this about everybody else and not about me. I’m going to try and support students as best as I can. I’m going to try to have great relationships with people across campus so we can work together, so we can do great things for our students’. [I]f you do that, you’re going to be in a really good spot, you’ll have a great reputation, and … you’ll be set up for whatever you want to do in the future….
5.3. Silence as Control
5.3.1. Dominique: Navigating My Experience beyond Diversity Work
These types of diversity initiatives are so siloed there’s no sort of intentional collaboration … across the college with faculty … to really … address the needs across the board…. [I]t’s not like a strategic plan, it’s not like a diversity mission, it’s not like a diversity plan from the president, from the provost coming down. [W]e’re working through the division doing … ad-hoc planning because that’s what we think we need … to do, but the president nor the provost nor the dean of the college are actively engaged in these conversations …. as far as long-term planning….
5.3.2. Max: Silencing Myself
[B]eing at an institution that is so privileged, at least from a financial standpoint, it attracts select colleagues, faculty, and even students that are also privileged in a variety of ways and may not have the sense of humility that would be needed to support underrepresented students or to understand the experiences that underrepresented students have.
When I feel that it’s necessary … and appropriate to share my background with others, I will. This may not be the right setting to … acknowledge and celebrate that side of me, when working with administrators and faculty, for the most part.
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions and Implications
Are you willing to go … work hard, get more skill sets … knowing that more than likely you’re not going to be promoted because you’re the wrong color? Are you there for the long run? If you expect it’s going to fun and games, pick a different career. Are you willing to go to places where you’re going to be, … shitted on, but you know long term that experience is going to help you get to another level? Are you willing to work with people that you know that you’re more qualified, but based on their ethnicity, it doesn’t matter? Are you okay with that? And if they say they are, then I would say if you do all that and you put up with a lot of the adversity, eventually it’s going to pay off. That’s the grit. I would say the reward is being able to change the life of individuals that … otherwise would not have been able to have been successful if it wasn’t for your intervention.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Total | Women | Men | |
---|---|---|---|
Ethnicity | |||
Chilean | 1 | 1 | - |
Cuban | 1 | 1 | - |
Dominican | 1 | 1 | - |
Ecuadorian | 1 | 1 | - |
Mexican | 5 | 4 | 1 |
Nicaraguan | 1 | - | 1 |
Puerto Rican | 6 | 5 | 1 |
Venezuelan | 1 | - | 1 |
Bi-Ethnic | 1 | 1 | - |
Bi-Racial | 1 | - | 1 |
Highest Level of Education | |||
Master’s of Arts | 12 | 10 | 2 |
Ed.D. | 2 | 1 | 1 |
J.D. | 1 | 1 | - |
Ph.D. | 4 | 2 | 2 |
Professional Level | |||
Advisor | 1 | 1 | - |
Coordinator | 2 | 1 | 1 |
Assistant Director | 2 | 2 | - |
Associate Director | 4 | 2 | 2 |
Director | 4 | 4 | - |
Assistant Dean | 1 | 1 | - |
Associate Dean | 3 | 3 | - |
Dean of Students | 1 | - | 1 |
Associate Vice President | 1 | - | 1 |
Functional Area | |||
Academic Affairs | 2 | 2 | - |
Assessment | 1 | 1 | - |
Career Development | 2 | 2 | - |
Diversity and Inclusion | 4 | 3 | 1 |
Residence Life | 5 | 4 | 1 |
Student Activities | 1 | - | 1 |
Student Success | 1 | 1 | - |
Dean of Students Office | 3 | 1 | 2 |
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Espino, M.M.; Ariza, J. “We’re Not Going to Overcome Institutional Bias by Doing Nothing”: Latinx/a/o Student Affairs Professionals as Advocates for Equity. Educ. Sci. 2022, 12, 716. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12100716
Espino MM, Ariza J. “We’re Not Going to Overcome Institutional Bias by Doing Nothing”: Latinx/a/o Student Affairs Professionals as Advocates for Equity. Education Sciences. 2022; 12(10):716. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12100716
Chicago/Turabian StyleEspino, Michelle M., and Juanita Ariza. 2022. "“We’re Not Going to Overcome Institutional Bias by Doing Nothing”: Latinx/a/o Student Affairs Professionals as Advocates for Equity" Education Sciences 12, no. 10: 716. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12100716
APA StyleEspino, M. M., & Ariza, J. (2022). “We’re Not Going to Overcome Institutional Bias by Doing Nothing”: Latinx/a/o Student Affairs Professionals as Advocates for Equity. Education Sciences, 12(10), 716. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12100716