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The Department of Chicana/o Studies adheres to the following core values as it works with students to achieve academic excellence: social justice, human rights, self- empowerment, cultural responsiveness and service to community.
To prepare culturally responsive and competent students with skills to work in multicultural and global contexts, understand the changing demographics in American society and articulate/analyze public policy issues such as human rights and immigration through the incorporation of concepts such as Chicanisma/o, Mexicanisma/o and Latinidad through approaches of inclusive pedagogy and praxis.
To create an international competitive Chicana/o Studies Department that attracts students globally and prepares them to address national and worldwide issues and concerns.
The Department realizes students need the best academic tools available in order to compete in the market place and to better the world we live in and understand tools come from a variety of sources. Academicians, scholars and practitioners of social change acknowledge that methods and theories utilized to analyze social, political, historical, economic, religious, gendered and racialized conditions emanate best from an interdisciplinary approach to teaching and learning. As a department, the philosophical underpinnings that inform our pedagogical practice include the work of renowned scholars such as Paolo Freire who assumes that the teacher is not all-knowing or neutral; the teacher shares his/her knowledge; however, within his philosophical framework, both teachers and students have a vested interest in a reciprocal process of learning. He states in Pedagogy of Freedom: Ethics, Democracy, and Civic Courage, “To teach is not to transfer knowledge but to create the possibilities for the production or construction of knowledge…Whoever teaches learns in the act of teaching, and whoever learns teaches in the act of learning” (p.30-31).
The Department understands Chicana/o Studies is a relatively new discipline, founded in the early 1970s, and which has grown tremendously as it ventures into new and exciting areas of inquiry. This relative newness puts CHS in a unique position with wonderful opportunities to define and/or position curricular issues within the discipline in 2012, or what the 2010 NACCS National Association of Chicana and Chicano Studies chair person, Dr. Devon Peña stated is the “Post-Neo Liberal Economy.” This means the Department must respond to current economic, social and political conditions in a meaningful way to prepare students for the new millennium.
Campus Location
Rectory Building, 1156 9th Street, Denver, CO 80217
Office Hours
Monday-Thursday: 9:00 AM-4:00 PM.
Friday: By appointment and remote.
Phone
303-615-0711
Mailing Address
Department of Chicana/o Studies
Metropolitan State University of Denver
Campus Box 41
P.O. Box 173362
Denver, CO
80217-3362
Fax
303-556-3178