Lizdelia Piñón

Education Associate at Intercultural Development Research Association

Lizdelia Piñón, Ed.D., is IDRA’s education associate with more than 20 years of experience in bilingual and ESL education in both K-12 as well as higher education. She has worked as a bilingual/ESL teacher, university instructor and graduate research assistant in education. Her areas of expertise include bilingual education, ESL (both K-12 and adult learning) programs and educational implementations. Growing up in Chicago, she attended as a student one of the first dual language programs from prekindergarten through eighth grade.

Dr. Piñón provides professional development and technical assistance to schools across the nation on effective bilingual education for all students. She designs and delivers interactive training that provides teachers tools for increasing student achievement in bilingual education areas. She also coordinates service delivery to schools across the U.S. South to ensure all students receive an excellent and equitable education, regardless of their national origin, native language or immigration status.

Dr. Piñón earned her doctorate of education in educational leadership from Texas Christian University (TCU) in Fort Worth, Texas. Her dissertation focused on implementation of translanguaging. She earned a master of science in literacy education and an advanced certificate of graduate studies in teaching English as a second language (TESOL) and bilingual education from Northern Illinois University (NIU) and a bachelor of arts in political science with a minor in Spanish from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). She holds a principal certification, and a generalist teaching certificates in EC-6 as well as in 4-8, as well as a bilingual education certification for grades EC-8 in both Texas and Illinois. She is fluent in Spanish and English.

Dr. Piñón has served as a public school bilingual and ESL teacher, bilingual education department chair and mentor for teachers in the Bensenville School District in Illinois. She has also worked closely with Everman ISD on several education initiatives and research action projects during her one-year superintendent internship.

While at TCU, Dr. Piñón was an instructor for undergraduate courses in the College of Education and the Intensive English Program. In this role, she trained in-service and pre-service teachers to implement equitable teaching and learning practices within TESOL curriculum and instruction. She trained international teachers and ran the TCU’s international Panamá Bilingüe program; founded the TCU Bilingüe program, trained TCU staff members in English language; organized the first-ever diversity, equity and inclusion training for TCU staff in the Intensive English Program; and co-taught in the Free English Collaborative (a six-U.S.-university cooperative that served students on various continents during the pandemic).

Dr. Piñón has also been a community advocate in North Texas for the past decade. One of her biggest passion is being a voice for those that do not have a voice. She helped start the first Hispanic Family Advisory at Cook Children’s Hospital in Fort Worth and is a member of its educational literacy committee. She is also an active member of the MHMR equity committee as well as their ECI Early Wellness Council.

Links

Timeline

  • Education Associate

    Current role