Welcome to Chasing Encounters, a podcast where we share stories that connect us, enlighten us, and encourage us to move forward. e encounter people from all walks of life, mainly BIPOC, people with disabilities and those in the LGBTQ+ community. At the heart of our conversations are language, culture, and identity, but most importantly, how these various encounters meet and intersect.
Join the conversation!
Support this podcast by commenting and sharing. Twitter: @chasenpodcast
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Host/Producer:
Yecid Ortega is an avid interest in social justice and anti-racism theory in language education.
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Volunteer:
Melissa Carter is a Masters student at OISE who is interested in learning about how education and gender intersect. She teaches at secondary school, usually Core French. She likes walking, travelling, reading, and sharing a chat over a hot chocolate.
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Welcome to Chasing Encounters, a podcast where we share stories that connect us, enlighten us, and encourage us to move forward. e encounter people from all walks of life, mainly BIPOC, people with disabilities and those in the LGBTQ+ community. At the heart of our conversations are language, culture, and identity, but most importantly, how these various encounters meet and intersect.
Join the conversation!
Support this podcast by commenting and sharing. Twitter: @chasenpodcast
*
Host/Producer:
Yecid Ortega is an avid interest in social justice and anti-racism theory in language education.
*
Volunteer:
Melissa Carter is a Masters student at OISE who is interested in learning about how education and gender intersect. She teaches at secondary school, usually Core French. She likes walking, travelling, reading, and sharing a chat over a hot chocolate.
Icon on logo provided by www.flaticon.com
A true American Southerner born in Georgia and with a vast experience in South America, Dr. Jason Mizell discusses some if his work with Testimonios as a form of research methodology.
His work stems from his culture, family, and community efforts to bring the voices of the most marginalized peoples (Latinx) to the front. He describes how he uses his skills and privileges to support them and questions how linguistics can really be anti-racist from both pedagogical and empirical approaches. Dr. Mizell briefly explains what is necessary to become a researcher who uses Testimonios as a methodology, as such, you need:
• To be invited
• To build relationships in communities and gain trust
• To be humble and learn with them
• To know why you want to do the work with the communities and educate yourself
• To be willing to push against the system
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Biography:
Dr. Jason Mizell is an Assistant Clinical Professor in Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Connecticut. He has taught in and directed various P-12 dual-language and ESOL programs, including having taught at some of the most prestigious bilingual schools in Latin America.
Cite this podcast (APA):
Ortega, Y. (Producer). (2021, April 13). CES5E5 – Testimonios as methodology. https://soundcloud.com/chasingencounters/ces5e5-testimonios-as-methodology
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Sources:
Mizell, J. (2020). Testimonios and apprenticeship: Developing relationships that nurture active civic engagement and learning. In R. Harman & K. Burke (Eds.) Culturally sustaining systemic functional linguistics: Embodied inquiry with multilingual youth. Routledge. pp. 39-63
Accurso, K., & Mizell, J.D. (2020). Toward an anti-racist genre pedagogy: Considerations for a North American context. TESOL Journal. Advance online publication. doi.org/10.1002/tesj.554
Chasing Encounters
Welcome to Chasing Encounters, a podcast where we share stories that connect us, enlighten us, and encourage us to move forward. e encounter people from all walks of life, mainly BIPOC, people with disabilities and those in the LGBTQ+ community. At the heart of our conversations are language, culture, and identity, but most importantly, how these various encounters meet and intersect.
Join the conversation!
Support this podcast by commenting and sharing. Twitter: @chasenpodcast
*
Host/Producer:
Yecid Ortega is an avid interest in social justice and anti-racism theory in language education.
*
Volunteer:
Melissa Carter is a Masters student at OISE who is interested in learning about how education and gender intersect. She teaches at secondary school, usually Core French. She likes walking, travelling, reading, and sharing a chat over a hot chocolate.
Icon on logo provided by www.flaticon.com