¿Soy Acaso Negra?: Beyond, Bilingual Education

¿Soy Acaso Negra?: A Testimonio on the Erasure of Black Latines within, and beyond, Bilingual Education
    • Date
      Friday, 21 November 2025 (12:00 - 13:00) (UK)
    • Location
      Room M37, 3rd Floor Mezzanine, Education Building, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT

Speaker: María Cioè-Peña, University of Pennsylvania

Black erasure remains a large issue within bilingual education with the standard association of Blackness in the U.S., often, equated with African American identity and English monolingualism. Conversely, most bilingual programming in the U.S. serves Spanish-users, and bilingual education research tends to centre Spanish-using Latinx students and communities. Across these contexts, the focus is on language and an imagined mixed-race (i.e, mestizo) collective, centering culture to circumvent race and treating language as connective yet racially neutral. As a result, addressing issues of anti-Blackness is often viewed as beyond the scope of bilingual education. However, as critical scholars have shown, language and perceptions of language users are not racially-neutral and practices that are rooted in this ideology create more harm than good. Black people exist within Latin America, the Latin American diaspora, and bilingual education settings. Thus, Black erasure in bilingual education upholds anti-Blackness and model minority narratives in education overall and results in tangible exclusion and oppression for Black bi/multilinguals.

Supported by theory and history, in this presentation, I “makes visible the internal and external pressures that have contributed to silencing my voice” as a bilingual Black Latina to shed light on the continued erasure of Black students in bilingual education programs and research.

Biography

María Cioè-Peña is an Associate Professor of Educational Linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education. A neurodiverse, bilingual/biliterate scholar, she studies how race, disability, and language intersect in education policy. Her research highlights how Latinx bilingual students and families are racialized and pathologized, shaping their access to inclusive, multilingual schooling. She is the author of (M)othering Labeled Children and co-founder and Editor-in-Chief of Racial Justice in Multilingual Education (RJME).

  • This is an in person event and registration is not required.
  • This event is free and open to the public, university staff and students .
  • Please note, this event is not being recorded.

Location

Address
Room M373rd Floor MezzanineEducation BuildingUniversity of BirminghamEdgbastonBirminghamB15 2TT