Kathryn McIntosh
Joyce Collin Furman Hall 301C
200 SW 15th Street
Corvallis, OR 97331
United States
Kathryn McIntosh is an Associate Professor of ESOL/bilingual and literacy education at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Oregon. She was the 2007 recipient of the First Place Outstanding Dissertation Award from the National Association for Bilingual Education (NABE). Her current research focuses on multilingual and multicultural learning in K-20, Latina Feminist Epistemologies, social justice, bilingual student sociocultural resources in science and social studies, and teacher education at the intersections of STEM and cultural/linguistic diversity.
Kathryn grew up in a bilingual/bicultural home in northern California, in the southern part of San Francisco Bay Area. Being the daughter of a Peruvian mother, she learned Spanish growing up, although in an English-dominant context because of the injustices of anti-bilingual sentiments of the era. It was a natural progression for Kathryn to study Spanish, graduate from UC Davis with studies around children and language, spend a year living in Spain, and then teach in bilingual elementary classrooms in the south Bay Area.
The faculty position at OSU interested her because it blends content area literacy, English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL), and bilingual programs. This position in the College of Education’s unit of Teacher Education allows Kathryn to make a difference with preservice and future teachers and the children they serve. Dr. McIntosh recently was awarded 2021-22 Ecampus Research Fellows (ECRF) funding for her project called “Mindfulness in Online Multicultural Education” that studies mindfulness as a resource for online students to engage in Multicultural Education and be empowered to learn challenging topics like racism, gender oppression, and privilege. Online students will be taught mindfulness through ten videos and asked to reflect in assignments about its value and how it supports learning. Kathryn is an investigator on Teachers Educating All Multilingual Students (TEAMS) that provides access to ESOL and Dual Language preparation for Oregon teachers, connecting schools with communities to enhance multilingual learning. Kathryn’s research is focused on a key component of TEAMS that is to deepen partnerships between districts and community organizations working with multilingual families and communities. Because of the changing demographics of the K-12 population, which do not align with preservice teacher demographics, Kathryn’s recent collaborative research projects provide the context for preservice teacher engagement with culturally and linguistically diverse youth. Families Involved in Education: Sociocultural Teaching and STEM (FIESTAS) is a collaboration between OSU’s College of Education, 4H Youth Development, and the Science and Math Investigative Learning Experiences (SMILE) program. The primary focus of the 4-H STEM program is to enhance the knowledge of STEM related topics of Latino and underrepresented youth in the 3rd to 5th grades, those typically underrepresented in STEM fields. Research investigation documents how this guided participation with youth and families in after-school contexts transforms and disrupts preservice teachers’ traditional notions about teaching and learning. This work has been funded by the Center for Latino/a Studies and Engagement, Precollege Programs, and L.L. Stewart Professional Development grants at Oregon State University.
Prior to this, a grant from the Oregon Department of Education supported collaborative research with in-service bilingual and ESOL teachers to explore innovative ways to integrate English Language Development, science and social studies content, and social justice in 3rd grade classrooms in a dual language bilingual program. This engaged research has deeply involved teachers in the co-construction of new knowledge, co-production of scholarship, and joint dissemination of results with practitioner and scholarly audiences. Through this research that blends the expertise and questions of not only a university scholar but also of public school educators, Dr. McIntosh has participated in collaborative relationships that further teaching, learning, and research in the areas of ESOL/bilingual, critical teacher education pedagogies, and content literacy education. The themes of language, bilingualism, cultural resources, and social justice have been present in Kathryn’s life since an early age and remain central to her work as a scholar and community member today.
Publications:
Name change to McIntosh in Fall 2019
-
McIntosh, K. (2023). Mindfulness in Multicultural Education: Critical Race Feminist Perspectives. Book published by Routledge Press.
-
Ettenauer, B., McIntosh, K., & Buxton, C. (2023). “This is not right?” Teachers telling stories about multilingual family engagement during COVID-19. Language and Education, 37(6), 698-716.
-
Buxton, C., McIntosh, K., Ettenauer, B., & Thompson, K., (2023). Educators Learning Lessons from Multilingual Family Engagement Through the COVID-19 Pandemic. School Community Journal. Accepted, in press.
-
Buxton, C., McIntosh, K., Ettenauer, B., & Burho, J. (2023). Teachers strengthening partnerships with multilingual families during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Kappa Delta Pi Record, 58(1) 73-77, DOI: 10.1080/00228958.2022.2125129.
-
Bottoms, S., *Ciechanowski, K, Jones, K, de la Hoz, J. & Fonseca, A. (2017). Leveraging the community context of Family Math and Science Nights to develop culturally responsive teaching practices. Teaching and Teacher Education, 61, 1-15.
-
Bottoms, S., Ciechanowski, K., & Hartman, B. (2016). Learning to teach elementary science to linguistically and culturally diverse children through iterative cycles of enactment. Journal of Science Teacher Education, 26(8), 715-742.
-
Ciechanowski, K., Bottoms, S., Fonseca, A., & St. Clair, T. (2015, spring). A Three-Part Framework for Cultural Competence in Afterschool Programs: Rey Mysterio as an Exemplar from the Families Involved in Education: Sociocultural Teaching and STEM Project. Afterschool Matters Journal.
-
Ciechanowski, K. (2014). Weaving Together Science and English: An interconnected model of language development for emergent bilinguals. Bilingual Research Journal, 37(3). 237-262.
-
Ciechanowski, K. (2014, fall). Critical linguistics in social studies: Using Modifying Adjectives to Generalize about Diverse Cultures in the United States. In K. Winograd (Ed.), Critical Literacies and Young Learners: Connecting Classroom Practice to the Common Core. New York: Routledge.
-
Ciechanowski, K. (2013, spring). Beyond one-size-fits-all ELD frameworks: Bringing English learners’ lives and social justice to the center of K-12 instruction. ORTESOL Journal, 30.
-
Ciechanowski, K. (2012). Conflicting Discourses: Linguistic and Critical Analyses of Pocahontas Texts in Bilingual 3rd Grade Social Studies. Journal of Literacy Research, 44(3), pp. 300-338. DOI:10.1177/1086296X12450699
-
Ciechanowski, K. (spring, 2012). In the words of a teacher: Finding avenues to communicate for ELLs. WA-TESOL Quarterly.
-
Ciechanowski, K. (2011). Points of Leverage: Navigating Tensions between Socio-Culturally Relevant Teaching and Accountability Pressures. Northwest Passage, 9(2), 47-59.
-
Cowin, K., Cohen, L., Ciechanowski, K., & Orozco, R. (2012). Portraits of Mentor-Junior Faculty Relationships: From Power Dynamics to Collaboration. Journal of Education, 192(1).
-
Cohen, L., Ciechanowski, K., Cowin, K., and Orozco, R. (2012). Portraits of Our Mentoring Experiences in Learning to Craft Journal Articles. Mentoring and Tutoring Journal, 20(1).
-
Ciechanowski, K. (2011). Bilingualism. In Moule, J., Cultural Competency: A Primer, second edition. Wadsworth Publishing (Section of Chapter 9, written as invited author).
-
Ciechanowski, K. (2009). A Squirrel Came and Pushed Earth: Popular Cultural and Scientific Ways of Thinking with ELLs. Reading Teacher, 62(7).
-
Moje, E. B., Ciechanowski, K., Kramer, K., Ellis, L., Carrillo, R., & Collazo, T. (2004). Working toward third space in content area literacy: An examination of everyday funds of knowledge and Discourse. Reading Research Quarterly, 39(1), 38-70.
Research/Career Interests:
Kathryn's research interests focus on multilingual and multicultural learning in K-20, Latina Feminist Epistemologies, social justice, bilingual student sociocultural resources in science and social studies and teacher education at the intersections of STEM and cultural/linguistic diversity.
She participates in collaborative relationships that further teaching, learning and research in the areas of ESOL/bilingual, critical teacher education pedagogies and content literacy education.
Kathryn’s newest project is changing the method of course ED 219 Civil Rights and Multicultural Issues in Education. The research and teaching project is “Social Justice, Civil rights, and Mindfulness in Education” . The curriculum of the class is being fully transformed so that students learn about social issues such as racial trauma and gender oppression in a holistic way, including elements of the body, intellect, and elements of mindfulness. The research within the class is gathered from the students’ self reflection of their experiences with injustices and how they deal with those topics as they are covered. Additionally, Kathryn’s work on the TEAMS project from the previous years is still underway, having moved from its first to its second cohort of focus groups.
Other research collaboration includes a project around students underrepresented in STEM fields: Families Involved in Education: Sociocultural Teaching and STEM (FIESTAS) - a collaboration between OSU’s College of Education, 4H Youth Development and the Science and Math Investigative Learning Experiences (SMILE) program.