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Spotlight
Irene Vega
Irene Vega Draws Upon Personal Experience to Explore Latina/o Academic
Achievement
Irvine, Calif., March 1, 2008
Irene grew up in a migrant family that followed the agricultural harvest
seasons between southern Arizona and northern California. When she was
in high school, her family finally settled in San Luis, Arizona, a small
town that borders the Mexican state of Sonora.
Upon graduating from Arizona State University (ASU) with degrees in
Political Science and Chicana/o Studies, Irene worked as a Prevention
Specialist with junior high and high school students and with youth who
had dropped out of formal schooling. The majority of the young people
Irene worked with were low income Latinas/os living in rural and urban
communities in Arizona. On many occasions, she and her students engaged
in intense conversations about their life goals and the importance of
higher education in helping them achieve those goals. Yet, these
students had been referred to the prevention program because of low
academic performance, low attendance levels, and disciplinary issues.
Irene recognized that "sadly, their goals and aspirations did not
parallel their academic profiles."
Professional practice and personal experiences propelled Irene to pursue
a Masteršs degree in Higher and Postsecondary Education at ASU, and she
focused her studies on the underrepresentation of Latina/o students in
higher education. As a graduate student, she also served as research
assistant on a project that examined rotating savings associations in
Mexican/Mexican-American communities. Irene graduated with an M.Ed. in
2007 and was named the Ed Pastor Outstanding Graduate and the Latina/o
Graduate Student Outstanding Graduate. She was honored to deliver the
student address at the 2007 Hispanic Convocation. Subsequently, she was
awarded a Eugene Cota-Robles Fellowship to pursue doctoral study at UCI.
Irene chose UCI's Ph.D. in Education program because it reflected her
intellectual interests, which lie at the intersection of research and
policy. She was particularly intrigued by the design of the doctoral
program, which facilitates learning across disciplines and engenders
collaboration among psychologists, sociologists, education scholars, and
teachers. She is enjoying the diversity of research interests among
students in the entering cohort and believes this is one of the
strengths of the program.
Irene's first year doctoral research project focuses on the achievement
gap between Latina and Latino students. She is conducting a qualitative
study to examine educational perceptions and academic strategies of
Latina/o high school students and is monitoring whether gendered
patterns emerge from the data.
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