WVC Speaks presents "Carrying Home: Immigration and Mexican Belonging in the Wenatchee Valley" with Dr. María Isabel Morales-Sánchez
March 6, 2026
Media Contacts:
Marcine Miller, Executive Director, Public Information Office, 509-682-6582, mmiller2@wvc.edu
Dr. María Morales-Sánchez, director of the Wenatchee Valley College El Corazón Center for Teaching and Learning, will present “Carrying Home: Immigration and Mexican Belonging in the Wenatchee Valley” on Thursday, March 12. The public is invited to this free WVC Speaks lecture, which begins at 6 p.m. in the Music and Art Center’s Grove Recital Hall on the Wenatchee campus.
Through storytelling, “Carrying Home” sheds light on the complex and empowering stories
of immigration from Mexico to the Wenatchee Valley. The lecture offers a counter-narrative
to the limited ways immigration and immigrant communities are often portrayed, framing
immigration as an intergenerational process shaped by relational networks and cyclical
migration patterns. As an immigrant, the daughter of immigrants, and the great-granddaughter
of “guest workers,” Morales-Sánchez reflects on what it means to inherit, carry, and
share immigrant stories that center human dignity and challenge dehumanizing narratives—particularly
those about immigrants from Mexico. The talk also confronts xenophobic frameworks
by reminding audiences of the pivotal role Mexican immigrant laborers have played,
and continue to play, in the socioeconomic fabric of the Wenatchee Valley.
Participants will have an opportunity to ask questions during a Q&A session at the end of the lecture.
Born in Michoacán, México, Morales-Sánchez was raised in California and the Wenatchee Valley. She attended Eastern Washington University, where she was a CAMP scholar and studied Chicanx Studies and Sociology. While studying at EWU, Dr. Morales-Sánchez recognized an inherent love for teaching and research that compelled her to apply to the Ronald E. McNair Scholar Program (a TRiO Program), through which she received mentorship and training to help her apply and enroll in a doctoral program. She obtained a PhD in Cultural Studies and Social Thought in Education at Washington State University. Her dissertation, titled “Conocimiento y Testimonio: An exploratory case study of Mexican American children of (im)migrants learning with(in) cherry orchards,” draws on a child-centered framework to challenge deficit-based understandings of children of immigrants.
Morales-Sánchez then went on to teach at Evergreen State College, where she taught courses in Latinx Studies and Education, before returning to the Wenatchee Valley a few years ago. She has served as the director of the North Central Washington Educational Opportunity Center at Central Washington University’s Wenatchee campus and as program manager at CAFÉ before joining WVC as the director of El Corazón. Morales-Sánchez participates in local equity and advocacy efforts, serving on the boards for the North Central WA Equity Alliance and the Foundation for Youth Resiliency and Engagement (FYRE).
WVC Speaks is Wenatchee Valley College’s monthly lecture series that celebrates our faculty and staff’s expertise on a range of topics relevant to life in North Central Washington. Our speakers are inspirational members of our faculty, staff, and community. WVC invites our community to come together to learn, engage with new perspectives, and connect.
WVC Speaks presenta "Carrying Home: Immigration and Mexican Belonging in the Wenatchee Valley" con la Dra. María Isabel Morales-Sánchez
La Dra. María Morales-Sánchez, directora de El Corazón Center for Teaching and Learning en Wenatchee Valley College presentará “Carrying Home: Immigration and Mexican Belonging in the Wenatchee Valley” el jueves, 12 de marzo. Se les invita a esta charla gratuita que forma parte de la serie WVC Speaks, que comenzará a las 6:00 pm en el Recital Hall del Music and Art Center en el campus de Wenatchee.
Mediante historias y cuentos, “Carrying Home” ilumina las complejas y empoderadoras historias de inmigración al valle de Wenatchee desde México. La charla ofrece una narrativa
alternativa a las maneras limitadas en las que a menudo se habla de la inmigración
y las comunidades de inmigrantes, contemplando la inmigración como un proceso intergeneracional moldeado por las redes
sociales y los patrones cíclicos de migración. Como inmigrante, hija de inmigrantes
y bisnieta de trabajadores temporales, Morales-Sánchez comentará qué significa heredar, cargar
y compartir historias de inmigración que priorizan la dignidad humana y desafían las
narrativas deshumanizantes, especialmente aquellas sobre los inmigrantes mexicanos. La
charla también desafiará los marcos xenofóbicos al recordar a la audiencia el papel clave que
han desempeñado los trabajadores mexicanos, y que siguen desempeñando, en el contexto
socioeconómico del valle de Wenatchee. Habrá un momento para hacer preguntas al final
de la charla.
Nacida en Michoacán, México, Morales-Sánchez fue criada en California y el valle de Wenatchee. Asistió a Eastern Washington University (EWU, por sus siglas en inglés), donde fue una ‘académica de CAMP’ y se especializó en estudios chicanos y sociología. Mientras estudiaba en EWU, la Dra. Morales-Sánchez descubrió su pasión por la enseñanza y la investigación que la animó a solicitar admisión al Ronald E. McNair Scholar Program (parte de TRiO), en el que recibió asesoría y capacitación para inscribirse en un programa de doctorado. Obtuvo su doctorado en estudios culturales y pensamiento social en educación de Washington State University. Su tesis, titulada “Conocimiento y Testimonio: An exploratory case study of Mexican American children of (im)migrants learning with(in) cherry orchards” se basó en un marco teórico que coloca al niño en el centro para desafiar a las perspectivas basadas en el déficit.
Después, Morales-Sánchez fue contratada como profesora en Evergreen State College, donde impartió cursos en estudios latinx y educación antes de volver al valle de Wenatchee hace unos años. Se desempeñó como directora de North Central Washington Educational Opportunity Center en el campus de Central Washington University y también como gerente de programas en CAFÉ antes de unirse a WVC como directora de El Corazón. Morales-Sánchez participa en actividades locales para concientizar sobre la equidad y la defensa comunitaria, y forma parte de las mesas directivas de North Central WA Equity Alliance y la Foundation for Youth Resiliency and Engagement (FYRE, por sus siglas en inglés).
WVC Speaks es una serie de charlas mensual ofrecida por Wenatchee Valley College que celebra el conocimiento de nuestros profesores y nuestro personal y cubre una gama de temas relevantes a la vida en el norte central de Washington. Nuestros ponentes son miembros inspiradores de nuestro profesorado, personal y comunidad. WVC invita a nuestra comunidad a reunirse para aprender, conocer nuevas perspectivas y conectarse.
About Wenatchee Valley College
Founded in 1939, Wenatchee Valley College enriches North Central Washington and delivers relevant, innovative, and experiential educational opportunities for thriving and healthy communities. Learn more at www.wvc.edu.
Equal Opportunity Statement
Wenatchee Valley College is committed to a policy of equal opportunity in employment and student enrollment. All programs are free from discrimination and harassment against any person because of race, creed, color, national or ethnic origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, the presence of any sensory, mental, or physical disability, or the use of a service animal by a person with a disability, age, parental status or families with children, marital status, religion, genetic information, honorably discharged veteran or military status or any other prohibited basis per RCW 49.60.030, 040 and other federal and state laws and regulations, or participation in the complaint process. Learn more at www.wvc.edu/publicdisclosure.


