Social Sciences Division
Assistant Professor
Faculty
Latin American & Latino Studies
Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas
McHenry Library
McHenry 3167
Education Department
Ph.D. University of Arizona 2022
Language, Reading, and Culture
Advisor: Perry Gilmore
M.A. University of Arizona 2014
Language, Reading, and Culture
Advisor: Mary Carol Combs & Richard Ruiz
B.A. University of Arizona 2011
Double Major: Anthropology & Mexican American Studies
Ethnographic approaches to early literacy and language; cultural, historical, and political dimensions of literacy and language practices; language socialization; language in the Borderlands; sociocultural theories of learning; Spanish heritage language studies; critical childhood studies; sociolinguistic justice; race, language, and identity development of children; qualitative methods.
At the heart of my research is the belief that we should honor children’s learning, knowledge, and practices in the early education classroom. My research furthers our understanding of children and the strength each student brings with them to the classroom. My research is comprised of two main strands of inquiry. Specifically, the first line of inquiry is two-parts and broadly examines how:
As an anthropologist, my research is inherently interdisciplinary, drawing from fields such as education, Latinx studies, applied linguistics, and Spanish as heritage language and critical childhood studies. I use a range of ethnographic and qualitative methodologies. I advance ethnographic methodologies in early education that argues for more methodological flexibility and that does not see children’s age as a deterrence to collaboration and investigation. An early education ethnographic approach asks us to see past perceived limitations and reductionist notions of children to further our understanding of children's lives, knowledge, and experiences.
CAE Concha Delgado-Gaitan Presidential Fellowship
Presidential Postdoctoral Fellowship Program, University of Arizona, 2022 (declined)
University of Arizona Hispanic Alumni Graduate Scholarship, Fall 2020
Dr. Maria Teresa Velez-Marshall Foundation Dissertation Fellowship, Spring 2020
Dolores R. Kaith Scholarship Endowment, University of Arizona, 2018
Erasmus Circle Graduate Scholarship University of Arizona, 2017
Second Place Community Category, GPSC Student Showcase, University of Arizona, 2017
Confluencenter Graduate Fellowship University of Arizona, 2016
The Peter W. Likins Graduate Fellowship Award University of Arizona, 2015
First Place Education Category, GPSC Student Showcase, University of Arizona, 2013
Arizona Graduate Scholars Award, University of Arizona, 2012
Aguilera, M. On Translating and (in)Visibility. (Forthcoming) In D. Grammon, S. Loza, D. Magaña &, A. Schwartz (Eds.) Aquí se habla: In conversation with local and personal Spanish Language Education; Critical Approaches in Applied Linguistics. DeGruyter.
Ruvalcaba, C., Aguilera, M. 2023. A Collaborative Asset Mapping Approach to the Linguistic Landscape: Learning from the community’s linguistic capital in an L2 college- writing course. In D. Malinowski, H. Maxim, &, S. Dubreil (Eds.) Spatializing language studies: Pedagogical approaches to the linguistic landscape. Springer.
Duran, L., Aguilera, M. 2022. Walls, Bridges, Borders, Papers: Civic Literacy in the Borderlands. Research in the Teaching of English. 57: 2. 156-176.
Cammarota, J. Aguilera, M. 2012. By the Time I Get to Arizona: Race, Language, and Education in America’s Racist State. Race, Ethnicity and Education Journal. 15:4, 485-500.