LatinX and Latin American Education Studies
Graduate Certificate (Online)
West Chester University's graduate certificate in Latinx and Latin American Education Studies provides an in-depth exploration of educational philosophies and practices from Latin America, emphasizing community, cultural relevance, and social justice. These approaches foster a critical perspective on how educational systems impact marginalized populations and how education can serve as a powerful tool for transformation.
This fully online program consists of four courses (12 credits), allowing you to earn your certificate conveniently and efficiently. As demographics continue to shift in the United States and globally, this certificate equips you to address the needs of increasingly diverse communities, empower learners, and effect positive change. It also qualifies for Continuing Education (CCE) credits, benefiting both educators and social workers.
COURSES
For more information regarding the Latin American Philosophies of Education Certificate courses, please see the Graduate Catalog.
Required
EDF560 - History of Latin American Educational Philosophy
This course provides an overview of key historical voices, text, and practices in
the tradition of Latin American thinking about education covering Pre-Columbian, Conquest,
Liberal, Nationalist, and Liberatory periods.
Typically offered in Fall, Spring & Summer.
EDF561 - LATIN AMERICAN PHILOSOPHIES OF EDUCATION: FROM COLONIAL TO DECOLONIAL EDUCATION, THEORY AND PRACTICE
The diversity of populations in Latin America and the region's political, cultural,
and economic achievements and challenges have shaped unique education philosophies
and practices. Likewise, a variety of education philosophies and practices within
the region have had enormous sociological, political, and economic impacts on the
region's populations. The principle aim of this course is to begin an exploration
of Latin American philosophies of education. Particular emphasis will be placed on
investigating the different ways that philosophers of Latin American education have
conceptualized education as a (trans)formative and liberatory process. Our inquiry
will be guided by these questions and others: What is the place of education in the
forming of Latin American cultures, identities, epistemic paradigms, and social movements
across the region? How have Latin Americans and those who study the region conceived
"education," "teaching," "curriculum," and "schooling"? How can we trace educational
theory, practices, and institutions from the pre-conquest civilizations of the Aztecs,
Incas, and others, to the communities and modern nation-states that make up contemporary
Latin America? To what degree is Latin American education theory "situated"? What
does it mean to suggest that education and knowledge can be colonized? What does it
mean to suggest that people can decolonize knowledge and liberate themselves to strive
in new cultural directions? How does philosophical inquiry into these issues illuminate
the quest for justice and equality in education and civil society? And finally, how
have a wide variety of contemporary Latin American social movements incorporated liberatory
education practices into their struggles for social justice?.
Typically offered in Fall, Spring & Summer.
EDF563 - Latin American Epistemologies
When it comes to preparing teachers, we speak about "knowledge," since that is the
foundational raw material with which teachers work. Nonetheless, what is knowledge?
What is knowledge for Latin Americans? Is it something generated only when teachers
and students meet together? Or is it created spontaneously? That question implies
concrete, but mostly philosophical, implications. In other words, it is an epistemological
matter. This course is devoted to showing how we have built our epistemologies growing
up in Latin America. Throughout history, foreign approaches tried to translate our
thought. Currently, many scholars and international organizations are seeking to hear
directly from us. This is why "decolonial thinking" is in vogue. Since you as an educator
or teacher work with Latin American students on a daily basis, you have the opportunity
to learn what knowledge and ways of knowing your students already have. This is related
not only to what contents or skills your students already handle. This course will
show you the way in which we have grasped our ways of knowing through our ways of
being, since our cosmovisions, cultural learning, qualitative symbols, and stories
have shaped our ways to know (epistemology) the world.
Typically offered in Fall, Spring & Summer.
Electives
EDF564 - LATIN AMERICAN NARRATIVE LEARNING
This course will address how narrative learning or narrative ways of knowing are necessary
epistemological foundations to curriculum in education. Stories are themselves ways
of knowing for us, the Latin American peoples. The epistemological breakthrough that
enabled narrative learning gaining a place within educational research has been a
historically difficult process. Narrative learning can be traced back to the way in
which indigenous peoples of Latin America have made sense of reality over millennia.
This idea leads to the notion of narrative knowledge as a special form of reasoning,
feeling, and grasping the world for us in Latin America. In our countries we translate
knowing into telling and telling into knowing. Narrating or telling our knowledge
is a special form of reasoning, feeling, and making sense of reality. In this course
students will learn how narratives become the key aspect of an intimate relation between
knower and the known for us. While we were growing up in Latin America, narratives
shaped the manner in which we thought about what we know and how we know it. That
process passed down from generation to generation. Thanks to the decolonial thinking
perspective in vogue, today we have the opportunity of speaking for ourselves to explain
our narrative ways of knowing and learning. Since you as an educator or teacher work
with Latin American students on a daily basis, you have the opportunity to learn what
knowledge and ways of knowing your students already have with them.
Typically offered in Fall, Spring & Summer.
*** An alternative graduate course relating to Latin America can be approved. Must receive prior approval from LAPE Coordinator. ***