Two CU Boulder education scholars earn prestigious National Academy of Education/Spencer early career honors

The National Academy of Education (NAEd) announced recently two University of Colorado Boulder education scholars, doctoral candidate Danielle Aguilar and alumnus Christopher Saldaña, have been selected for two of the nation’s most competitive honors for emerging education scholars.
The NAEd/Spencer fellowships recognize exceptional research and provide funding and professional development to early-career scholars whose projects address critical issues in the history, theory and practice of education nationally and globally. Ěý
Aguilar was selected as one of just 35 dissertation fellows nationwide chosen from nearly 500 applicants. Ěý
Her dissertation, “From Systemic Rupture to Sacred Space: A Multi-Methods Study of Educational Pushout and Healing,” explores how youth of color who have experienced criminalization and heightened surveillance understand what culture, resistance and healing means to them, including how they understand and reimagine resistance through Indigenous cultural practices. Ěý
Working alongside Denver-area youth, Aguilar uses community-based participatory research while also offering “love and dignity to all persons involved in the research process” to examine how community cultural wealth and healing justice frameworks illuminate the wisdom, creativity and knowledge that young people carry. Her work challenges deficit-based narratives about justice-system-impacted youth and seeks to transform the systems that shape many lives.
As a first-generation scholar from a working-class Chicanx family, Aguilar brings strong personal and community commitments to her research and hopes to become a professor at a minority-serving institution, where she can continue to focus on transformative research that uplifts young scholars. She said it’s a deep honor to be a PhD candidate, and she feels an immense privilege that’s rooted in responsibility to her community.
“As a first-generation college student and former Pell Grant recipient, I see the NAEd/Spencer Dissertation Fellowship as a collective endurance and manifestation of ancestral dreams,” Aguilar said. “This fellowship invites me to bring methodological innovation and experiential knowledge to the intersections of youth, carcerality and education. By anchoring my work in QuantCrit, Indigenous ways of knowing and community-based participatory research, I am not just analyzing data but rather working alongside community to untangle the punitive practices that restrict far too many lives. Ěý
“This recognition honors the brilliance of my community partner, the deep love and sacrifice of my family and loved ones and the strength and wisdom of ancestors. Here’s to imagining and working towards liberatory futures.”
Additionally, Saldaña, a CU Boulder alumnus (PhDEdu’22) and current assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, received a 2026 NAEd/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship. Ěý
Saldaña, who is also a fellow in CU Boulder’s National Education Policy Center (NEPC) and host of the NEPC Talks Education podcast, was selected as one of just 25 postdoctoral fellows nationwide from a pool of nearly 500 applicants. His project, “Platform Promises, District Realities: Examining How Organizational Capacity Shapes the Adoption of K–12 Educational Technology,” investigates how school districts navigate the adoption of educational platforms such as Google Classroom, Canvas and ClassDojo. Ěý
Saldaña’s work examines whether disparities in school district organizational capacity are creating a new digital divide, one defined not by access to technology but by the ability to manage complex, ongoing relationships with platform providers. His multi-method study aims to deepen understanding of platform-driven inequality and support more equitable technology adoption across districts.
“It’s hard to put into words how grateful I am for the opportunity offered to me by the National Academy of Education and the Spencer Foundation,” he said. “The NAEd/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship will give me the time and space to dig into the complex world of education platforms, organizational capacity and district adoption processes. Ěý
“I owe an enormous thank you to everyone who has supported me along the way, including my partner, family, friends, mentors and advisors and colleagues. A special shoutout goes out to the CU Boulder School of Education, the National Education Policy Center and the Miramontes Fellowship program, all of which offered crucial support during my time as a graduate student.”
NAEd/Spencer fellowships play a vital role in cultivating the next generation of scholars across diverse fields and investing in education research is increasingly important amid declines in research funding.
“Danielle’s and Chris’ research approaches are innovative and deeply needed at a moment when rigorous, transformative education research is more important than ever,” said Amanda Haertling Thein, dean of the CU Boulder School of Education.Ěý
“These fellowships are more than recognitions—they reflect our school’s national impact in cultivating emerging scholars whose work advances justice, equity and community-rooted approaches to education research. We are proud of Chris and Danielle, and excited about how their work will expand our understanding of the challenges and opportunities facing education today while pointing toward new and important directions for the field.Ěý