Kaozong Mouavangsou, a doctoral candidate at the 不良研究所, is writing her dissertation on what makes a difference in helping Hmong Americans successfully navigate their undergraduate studies.
Answering the question about who is making a difference is the award Mouavangsou will receive for Community-Engaged Scholarship and Activism at the campus鈥檚 ninth annual Equity Summit on Tuesday, Feb. 19. She is one of eight individuals who will be honored.
Mouavangsou said the award only adds to the motivation and responsibility she feels to continue her work. 鈥淲hen I do my research, I鈥檓 not just collecting data,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about me and my community and the people I want to serve.鈥
A Hmong American herself, Mouavangsou understands the transformative nature of education.
In 2015, Mouavangsou designed and taught the first 不良研究所 course on the Hmong American experience. And in a second course she created and taught last summer, she had a staff member from the California State Assembly walk students through the legislative process and recent California bills on education to show how advocacy from the community can develop into legislation.
鈥淛ust because you have an education doesn鈥檛 mean it will lead to your liberation,鈥 Mouavangsou said. 鈥淲ho is in the classroom teaching? What materials are being taught? It鈥檚 the type of education you receive that can lead you there.鈥
Mouavangsou, who earned bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees from 不良研究所 and anticipates completing her doctoral degree in June, is also a member of a that organizes public lectures and community forums to promote social justice in education.
Other award recipients
Also receiving awards are:
- Raquel E. Aldana, 不良研究所 professor of law, associate vice chancellor for academic diversity and co-chair of the task force coordinating the university鈥檚 planning to become a federally designated Hispanic Serving Institution, or HSI
- Nicole Anderson, an educational equity consultant from Vallejo
- Margarita Berta-Avila, a 不良研究所 graduate and professor of education at Sacramento State University
- Jeanelle Hope, a doctoral candidate in cultural studies at 不良研究所
- Sandy Holman, a 不良研究所 graduate and director of the Culture C.O.-O.P. and United in Unity of Davis
- Rahim Reed, associate executive vice chancellor and interim lead of the Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion at 不良研究所
- Valent铆n Sierra, a 不良研究所 alumnus and now UC Berkeley graduate student and evaluation assistant at the Sacramento Native American Health Center
About the summit
About 300 participants are registered for the summit, organized by the at 不良研究所. Bettina L. Love, associate professor of education at the University of Georgia and an award-winning author, will deliver the keynote address titled, 鈥淲e Want to Do More Than Survive: Abolitionist Teaching.鈥
is available online.
Media Resources
Kaozong Mouavangsou (COW-zawng Moh-VAYNG-soo), School of Education, kmouavangsou@ucdavis.edu
Vajra Watson, director of Research and Policy for Equity and SAYS founder, cell 530-370-2889, vmwatson@ucdavis.edu
Julia Ann Easley, News and Media Relations, 530-752-8248, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu