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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Betina Hsieh , Roland Sintos ColomaPublisher: Myers Education Press Imprint: Myers Education Press ISBN: 9781975507282ISBN 10: 1975507282 Pages: 250 Publication Date: 30 April 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Foreword – Kevin K. Kumashiro Introduction: Moments and Movements: An Invitation to Build With Us Betina Hsieh and Roland Sintos Coloma Part One: The Moment We Begin Chapter 1: Asian American History 101: What Every Person Needs to Know Richard Mui Chapter 2: ""I think that we're definitely doing something wrong"": Learning From Asian American Youth About Identity, Advocacy, and Educational Change Noreen Naseem Rodríguez, Esther June Kim, and Sohyun An Chapter 3: He Moʻolelo No Kupa: Cultivating Culturally Sustaining and Revitalizing Pedagogy Through Kanaka ʻŌiwi Epistemology 'Alohilani Okamura and Kirsten Mawyer Chapter 4: Finding and Building Community: Stop Waiting for Someone Else Jung Kim Response to Part 1 – The Moment We Begin Theodore Chao Part Two: Building an Inclusive Movement Chapter 5: A Deliberate Choice: Multiple Consciousness and K-12 Asian American Studies Praxis Edward R. Curammeng, Giselle Cunanan, and Cheralen A. Valdez Chapter 6: Affirming and Honoring the Voices of South Asian Americans in the K-12 Classroom Ruchi Agarwal-Rangnath Chapter 7: What I've Learned Creating and Teaching a High School Middle Eastern Studies Elective for the Last 16 Years Monica Eraqi Chapter 8: Learning With and From Student Community Cultural Wealth Norman Sales Response to Part 2 – Building an Inclusive Movement: Curricular Re-Memberings Bic Ngo Part Three: Extending the Movement Chapter 9: Becoming Justice-Oriented Educational Leaders: Counternarratives and Praxis From Boggs, Kochiyama, and Itliong Paul Koh Chapter 10: Mapping Consequential Geographies: Examining the Model Minority Racial Project in Teacher Education Lawrence Teng, Cathery Yeh, and William Bae Chapter 11: ""Activism can be the journey rather than the arrival"": Organizing for Teaching Asian American and Pacific Islander History in Michigan Roland Sintos Coloma Chapter 12: The Fight for Asian American Studies in a ""Red State"": Voices From Texas Indira Moparthi, Annie Nguyen, and Mohit Mehta Response to Part 3 – At the Wonton-making Table: On Belonging and Resistance Edwin Mayorga Part Four: Envisioning New Worlds Chapter 13: Am I a Model Minority?: Critical Reflections on Asian American Pasts and Futures Wayne Au Chapter 14: Homeplace: Finding a Sense of Self Among Shattered Realities Sawsan Jaber Chapter 15: River of Collective Struggle: Intergenerational Fugitivity One Heartbeat Collective Response to Part 4 – Centering RADical Asian American Epistemologies to Envision New Worlds Allyson Tintiangco-CubalesReviews""A necessary read for all educators interested in learning how to cultivate justice-focused futures and possibilities. This anthology is a warm and encouraging, yet provocative, invitation to readers to join a vibrant, collective conversation in continuing the dynamic movement for Asian American Studies and culturally sustaining education. The collective and conversational approach reminds readers that they are not alone in doing the hard but necessary work to build more humanizing futures through a solidarity ethic.""----OiYan Poon, Author, ""Asian American is Not a Color: Conversations on Race, Affirmative Action, and Family"" (2024), Co-Director, College Admissions Futures Co-Lab ""In naming our community Asian American+ to signify 'diverse inclusion, ' this brave book adopts a resolute stance that is unapologetic in resisting the manufactured identities historically assigned (to us). Through powerful counterstories, this ensemble of authors speak into visibility the multi-truths of AA/NHPI/AMEA lives, laying a pathway towards critical Asian American+ studies needed to honor and do justice to the rich complexity of narratives and voices we embody.""----A. Lin Goodwin, Thomas More Brennan Professor of Education, Boston College ""This collection from educators at all levels of schooling, young people, and organizers breathes life into the legacies and possibilities of Asian American studies. The way to engage Asian America, as detailed in these chapters, is not through anti-Asian hate but in how Asian America has always found ways to build, create, hope, and build solidarity of shared struggles for freedom and collective self-determination. We've needed this collection, and it is an indispensable resource for forging forward.""----Leigh Patel, Professor, University of Pittsburgh, Author of ""No Study Without Struggle: Confronting Settler Colonialism in Higher Education"" (2021) ""A heartfelt collection of counterstories rooted in resistance, advocacy, and joy, this book explores identity and historical erasures while envisioning liberatory futures across Asian diasporic experiences. With a deliberate emphasis on Native Hawaiian voices, Moments & Movements features culturally sustaining pedagogies and youth-led activism, inspiring transformative change through reclaimed narratives and inclusive spaces.""----Estella Owoimaha-Church, Educator, Organizer, Liberated Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum Consortium Author InformationBetina Hsieh (she/her) is the Boeing Endowed Professor of Teacher Education at the University of Washington (Seattle). Dr. Hsieh, a proud second generation Asian American MotherScholar and former urban middle school teacher, has published widely in peer reviewed journals and presented over 40 research papers on issues related to teaching, teacher education, teacher professional identity, teachers of color, and Asian American educators. Recent peer-reviewed publications include articles in Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education; English Teaching: Practice and Critique; Literacy Research and Instruction; Journal of Diversity in Higher Education; the Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy; the Peabody Journal of Education; and the Journal of Teacher Education. Dr. Hsieh's work focuses on how who people are shapes what they do (and the choices they make) as educators. She believes in the importance of educational research that is accessible to teacher education practitioners, K-12 educators, community members and families in addition to impacting the field itself. To that end, she has published in K-12 focused journals and magazines like Educational Leadership; the English Journal; and Voices from the Middle, as well as being cited in the Atlantic. Additionally, she has given a TEDx talk, Learning from One Another: Lessons in (Educational) Excellence and appeared as a guest on multiple educational podcasts including the Black Gaze podcast and All of the Above. Her previous book, The Racialized Experiences of Asian American Teachers, co-authored with Dr. Jung Kim, is the first comprehensive research monograph focused on the experiences of Asian American teachers using the tenets of Asian Critical Race Theory. Roland Sintos Coloma is a Professor of Teacher Education at Wayne State University in Detroit. His research examines the cultural politics of difference in education with a focus on race, class, gender, and sexuality from historical, intersectional, and transnational frameworks. His publication record consists of 4 books and over 40 articles and book chapters in prominent journals and academic presses. He has garnered over $3 million of external funding from federal, education, and philanthropic agencies to support youth, career-pipeline, and community development initiatives. Roland was elected president of the American Educational Studies Association, chosen as editor of the Educational Studies journal, and appointed by the Governor as member of the Michigan Asian Pacific American Affairs Commission. He has also received two recognitions from the American Educational Research Association with the Distinguished Scholar Award (2017) from the Research on the Education of Asian and Pacific Americans SIG and Article of the Year Award (2015) from the Queer Studies SIG. Born in the Philippines and raised in California, Roland was a high school English teacher, minority student affairs professional, and community organizer prior to becoming an academic. 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