Tara Yosso is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
""The perfect combination of empiricism, qualitative analysis, and literature. Engaged scholarship at its best."" -- Richard Delgado, Distinguished Professor of Law & Derrick Bell Fellow, University of Pittsburgh ""Tara Yosso is a prolific contributor to the path-breaking area of critical race theory in education, and is both a rigorous scholar and powerful storyteller. Her critical race counterstories are grounded in wide-ranging data, and challenge us to consider race, class, gender, language, and immigration status in relationship to the schooling of Chicanas/Chicanos. This book represents provocative, insightful, and accessible scholarship from which students, educators, and educational researchers have much to gain."" -- Dolores Delgado Bernal, Associate Professor of Education and Ethnic Studies, University of Utah ""This is an outstanding contribution to the growing scholarship on Chicana/o education. Yosso skillfully provides the field with the most powerful and insightful analysis ever produced about the experiences Chicanas/os endure as they navigate the obstacle-laden educational pipeline, from elementary school through graduate school. Using the lens of critical race theory and a rich corpus of social science research, Yosso shapes multiple counterstories into a dynamic fusion of shared discourse that challenges social and racial injustice along the educational pipeline. Critical Race Counterstories offers visibility to the invisible, and much hope to Chicanas/os who face despair at the margins of society."" -- Richard R. Valencia, Professor of Educational Psychology and Faculty Associate of the Center for Mexican American Studies, University of Texas at Austin ""[Tara J. Yosso's] stellar scholarship provides the missing voices of students through counterstories, a methodological strategy based on a cutting-edge framework: critical race theory in education...The valuable book offers the fields of both Chicano studies and education new methodologies and theoretical frameworks with which to analyze Chicana/o students' experiences.""--Journal of Latinos and Education, 6(1) by Valerie Talavera-Bustillos, California State University, Los Angeles 2008 AESA Critics' Choice Book Award Winner