KMap
❝
Dr. Judy Marquez Kiyama serves as the Associate Vice Provost, Faculty Development within the Office of Faculty Affairs at the University of Arizona. In this role she implements efforts that further the aims of the University of Arizona to excel in its Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI) designation through increasing institutional capacity among faculty. This includes developing equity-focused recruitment, hiring, and retention practices; and developing faculty capacity in research, teaching and curriculum, and service. Dr. Kiyama is a professor in the Center for the Study of Higher Education, Department of Educational Policy Studies and Practice.
Prior to serving in this role, Dr. Kiyama was Chair of the Higher Education Department at the University of Denver’s Morgridge College of Education where she supported faculty in developing their scholarly agendas, inclusive teaching practices, annual review processes, and mechanisms of support for students. She worked to cultivate partnerships across the university and state-wide institutions to establish accessible opportunities for students. Additionally, she served as the College’s Office of Diversity and Inclusive Faculty Fellow where she established a comprehensive plan for recruiting, hiring, and retaining faculty of color, organized regular mentoring sessions with faculty of color, and (co)developed an audit tool for implementing recruitment and retention plans. Dr. Kiyama has served as a faculty member at both the University of Denver and the University of Rochester.
As a community-engaged scholar, her research examines the structures that shape educational opportunities for minoritized groups through an asset-based lens to better understand the collective knowledge and resources drawn upon to confront, negotiate, and (re)shape such structures. Working alongside Latinx/o/a families and communities are at the core of her research efforts. She grounds her work in community knowledge and organizes her research in three interconnected areas: the role of parents and families; equity and power in educational research; and minoritized groups as collective networks of change. As a first-generation, Mexican American college student, she draws on her own experiences with her family to connect with the sources of support that first-generation, families of color offer their students in the transition to college. Her numerous publications focus on equity and inclusion efforts to better serve minoritized students, and their families and communities, including her most recent book: Funds of Knowledge in Higher Education: Honoring Students’ Cultural Experiences and Resources as Strengths.
Dr. Kiyama is committed to building partnerships across academic and student support units, and community and institutional contexts. She brings a deep understanding of the organization and governance of higher education institutions; a long-established research agenda focused on educational access and opportunity for Latinx/o/a communities; a record of cultivating effective teams at the department, institution, and national levels; and a passion for faculty development. She is a three-time graduate of the University of Arizona and a proud former participant of both the New Start Summer Program and TRiO Student Support Services.Show Less
VOSviewer
Grants
- STEM Ed PRF: Research on Educational Equity and Diversity in STEM (REEDS)
Co-Investigator (COI)
2022
$1.3M
Active - PROJECT CREAR: Culturally Responsive Engagement, Articulation, and Research
Co-Investigator (COI)
2021
$2.0M
Active - Excelencia 2021 Leadership Institute: Intentional Faculty Development to Serve Latino and All Students
Principal Investigator (PI)
2021
$13.0K
News
- UArizona will increase support for Hispanic and low-income STEM students with $5M grant
2022
- UArizona Shares in $5M Grant to Support Latino Humanities Studies
2021
- All Campus Leadership Awards Deadline Feb. 13
2004
- Year in Review 2002: Education
2002
- UA 125th Commencement Dec. 15 at McKale
2001
Publications (63)
Recent
- The handbook of student affairs administration
2023
- The Impact of COVID-19 on Faculty, Staff, and Students: Using Research to Help Higher Education Heal through the Pandemic and Beyond
2023
- A letter to future scholars in the struggle for justice
2022
- Communication Patterns Between Institutions and the Families of First-Generation College Students: A Multiple Case Study
2022
- The embodiment and enactment of funds of knowledge among Latina/o university outreach staff
2022
- " There are Obstacles... but We Can Do It": Latina/o/x Activate Community Cultural Wealth and Funds of Knowledge in the College Transition
2022
- Tying it all together: Defining the core tenets of funds of knowledge
2021
- Centering Social Justice in the Learning Experience Across Disciplines
2021
- Cultivating postsecondary aspirations in immigrant and refugee families through community education, engagement, and empowerment
2020
- Parents and families of first-generation college students experience their own college transition
2020
- An Approach to Studying Latina (o) Students’ Transition to College
2019
- Funds of knowledge: An approach to studying Latina (o) students’ transition to college
2019
- 2 Funds of Knowledge
2019
- “In Academia, But Not of It” 1—Redefining What It Means to Serve
2019
- Ideologies of invisibility and support for Families of Color during orientation initiatives
2019
- The dangling carrot: Proprietary institutions and the mirage of college choice for Latina students
2018
- Funds of knowledge in higher education
2018
- Failed educational justice: Refugee students’ postsecondary realities in restrictive times
2018
- Examining the inclusivity of parent and family college orientations: A directed content analysis
2018
- Beyond hovering: A conceptual argument for an inclusive model of family engagement in higher education
2018
- “We’re Serious About Our Education”: A Collective Testimonio From College-Going Latinas to College Personnel
2018
- Clearing the path for first-generation college students: Qualitative and intersectional studies of educational mobility
2018
- Controlling Images
2017
- College Aspirations and Limitations
2017
- Introduction: The need for a funds of knowledge approach in higher education contexts
2017
- The future of funds of knowledge in higher education
2017
- A complementary framework: Funds of knowledge and the forms of capital
2017
- Funds of knowledge as a culturally responsive pedagogy in higher education
2017
- A review of existing research on funds of knowledge and the forms of capital
2017
- Conclusion: The future of funds of knowledge in higher education
2017
- Funds of knowledge in higher education: Honoring students’ cultural experiences and resources as strengths
2017
- PARENTS IN TRANSITION
2016
- Against all odds: Latinas activate agency to secure access to college
2016
- Fighting for respeto: Latinas’ stories of violence and resistance shaping educational opportunities
2016
- Parent and family engagement in higher education
2015
- Cultivating campus environments to maximize success among Latino and Latina college students
2015
- The role of school and community-based programs in aiding Latina/o high school persistence
2015
- A cycle of retention: Peer mentors' accounts of active engagement and agency
2014
- The plight of invisibility: A community-based approach to understanding the educational experiences of urban Latina/os
2014
- " Contra La Corriente"(Against the Current): The Role of Latino Fathers in Family-School Engagement.
2014
- Structured opportunities: Exploring the social and academic benefits for peer mentors in retention programs
2014
- A critical agency network model for building an integrated outreach program
2012
- Funds of knowledge: An approach to studying Latina (o) students' transition to college
2012
- Moving from individual to collective cultures to serve students of color
2012
- Moving from cultures of individualism to cultures of collectivism in support of students of color
2012
- Educational experiences of Latinas: Lessons of resistance.
2012
- A follow-up: School experiences of Latina/o students: A community-based study of resources, challenges, and successes.
2011
- Family lessons and funds of knowledge: College-going paths in Mexican American families
2011
- Funds of knowledge for the poor and forms of capital for the rich? A capital approach to examining funds of knowledge
2011
- College aspirations and limitations: The role of educational ideologies and funds of knowledge in Mexican American families
2010
- School Experiences of Latina/o" Students: A Community-Based Study of Resources, Challenges, and Successes
2010
- “School Experiences of Latino/a Students” A community based Study of
2010
- Graduate Student News-ASHE Newsletter Winter 2009
2009
- New opportunities: When to say yes, how to say no, and finding the balance.
2009
- Nuestra Voces (Our Voices) II: Latino/a Doctoral Graduate Experiences.
2009
- Graduate Student News-ASHE Newsletter Fall 2009
2009
- Graduate Student News. ASHE Newsletter. Winter 2008
2008
- Local cosmopolitans and cosmopolitan locals: New models of professionals in the academy
2008
- Connecting graduate students with academic giants.
2008
- Graduate Student News. ASHE Newsletter. Fall 2008
2008
- Funds of knowledge and college ideologies: Lived experiences among Mexican-American families
2008
- P2O: Exploring power, privilege, and oppression with college students.
2007
- Leadership identity development and the Arizona Blue Chip Program.
2004
Grants
Citations
H-Index
Patents
News
Books
Opportunities