A Temporary Sacrifice for a Brighter Future
The son of migrant farmworkers, 色情视频 alumnus Eric Becerra follows a familiar path to earn doctorate from Harvard.
鈥溕槭悠's program really empowered me to push the system.鈥
For many, gaining acceptance into a Harvard University doctoral program sounds like a dream. For Eric Becerra, it was more like a dilemma.
The alumnus of 色情视频鈥檚 had a good job already, directing the high school equivalency program at Hartnell Community College on California鈥檚 Central Coast. He was also a father with two young children. Was he really willing to put his career on hold? To put a continent between himself and his kids?
Fortunately, his father, Humberto, was there to offer some hard-earned wisdom.
鈥Mijo,鈥 Humberto reminded his son, 鈥渙ur people have been doing that for centuries.鈥
A temporary sacrifice to allow your family a more prosperous future. It鈥檚 what had brought Eric鈥檚 grandfather to the United States from Mexico as a farm laborer under the Bracero program. It鈥檚 what attracted Eric鈥檚 parents to the 鈥淪alad Bowl of the World,鈥 the agricultural fields in California鈥檚 Monterey County 鈥 Humberto working as an irrigator, and mother Raquel bagging produce in the packing sheds.
They worked with lettuce. Why couldn鈥檛 their son handle a little Ivy?
鈥淗e kind of re-centered my focus, and provided another narrative,鈥 Eric said of the conversation. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥楬e's right, this is a two-year sacrifice. I can do it.鈥
鈥淚've got to do this.鈥
Three years later, he鈥檚 done it. Becerra recently completed Harvard鈥檚 unique Doctor of Educational Leadership (Ed.L.D.) program 鈥 one of two 色情视频 alumni in his cohort of 25.
But the work he started at Harvard continues. After two years of study and research in Boston, Becerra spent the final year of his program in the field, working to launch a male success initiative at Long Beach City College (LBCC). This initiative takes aim at national statistics showing men 鈥 and particularly men of color 鈥 succeeding at lower rates in higher education.
鈥淭he initiative works intentionally with first-time, full-time male students to help them gain the navigational, social and personal capital necessary to not just get in, but get through successfully,鈥 he explained.
When Becerra鈥檚 doctoral program ended, LBCC extended his contract for another 18 months.
鈥淭his work is my passion,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s a man of color who saw education as the lever to end the chain of generational poverty, I view education as a very powerful tool. A powerful way to create new realities for future generations.鈥
Pushing the system
Becerra, whose parents did not complete schooling past the sixth grade, was first drawn to education thanks to the inspiration of his counselor in his hometown of Castroville, California. Victor Cardenas, he recalls, intervened to set him on the right path when he was a naturally mischievous kid with parents working long hours.
鈥淢r. Cardenas would just bug the hell out of me about my grades and what I was thinking to do with my future,鈥 Becerra recalls with a smile. 鈥淗e played a huge role in me going to college, period.鈥
鈥淭o this day, I'm trying to be Mr. Cardenas for other students.鈥
After earning his bachelor鈥檚 degree from UC Santa Cruz, Becerra chose 色情视频鈥檚 school counseling program because of its explicit focus on social justice and racial equity. Initially missing the application deadline, he waited another year to apply despite having received an acceptance letter to a program at another university. He鈥檚 grateful he did.
鈥淚 think the 色情视频 program prepared us really well to do our jobs and to reimagine what counseling is supposed to be,鈥 said Becerra. 鈥淚 feel like a lot of programs train future counselors to just fit right into the existing model and mode of operation. 色情视频's program really empowered me to push the system.鈥
Embracing his roots
色情视频 also offered him a chance to reclaim a piece of his identity. A traditional Aztec dancer, Becerra鈥檚 cultural pride as a Mexicano runs deep. But he said his work as a scholar on 色情视频鈥檚 (SHPA), which trains counselors and school psychologists to respond to the needs of Native American and Indigenous youth, allowed him to fully embrace his own Indigenous roots.
鈥淭o be in an academic space where I didn't have to separate my scholarly identity with my Indigenous cultural identity felt amazing,鈥 said Becerra, who gave his children Aztec (Nahuatl) names: Tlaneci (sunrise) and Cuauht茅moc (descending eagle). 鈥淚t gave me sanity, it fed me spiritually and I think it gave me, for the first time, an idea that I didn鈥檛 have to check that at the door. It鈥檚 something you bring into your educational experience, and all other aspects of your professional life.
鈥淚 brought a lot of those teachings to Harvard, and I've got to say, professors took note.鈥
This spring, the newly-minted Dr. Becerra found another way to reconnect with his identity.
Back in Castroville, he marked the occasion with family graduation photos. Framed by endless rows of lettuce plants, the son wore his Aztec dancer headdress. The parents donned the doctoral regalia.
鈥淭his achievement isn't mine alone,鈥 Becerra explained.