Giselle B. Esquivel – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Tue, 28 Mar 2017 19:46:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Giselle B. Esquivel – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Fordham Mourns Education Professor Giselle Esquivel https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/fordham-mourns-education-professor-giselle-esquivel/ Tue, 28 Mar 2017 19:46:32 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=66205 Fordham University mourns the death of Giselle Esquivel, Psy.D.,, professor emeritus of the Graduate School of Education (GSE), who died on March 26 at the age of 67.

Esquivel joined the GSE in 1982, and taught in the Division of Psychological and Educational Services for 30 years, before retiring in 2012.

Rene Cordero, her husband of 31 years, said that Esquivel, a fellow refugee from Cuba who fled to the United States with her brother when she was 11, was energized by her research, which centered on bilingual students.

“She loved the stimulation of the environment and she loved the students,” he said. “And as I understand it, the students loved her.

“A lot of people might not know it but she had a real artistic side, too. Early on she used to play the flute. She liked to paint also; it was something she picked up later as a hobby.”

Esquivel earned her Doctor of Psychology in 1981 from Yeshiva University and joined the GSE faculty shortly afterward. She served as chair of Psychological and Educational Services, coordinator of school psychology programs, and director of therapeutic Interventions masters program, director of the psychology of bilingual students masters program, and director of the bilingual school psychology program.

In her research, she explored the ways in which positive psychology might be incorporated into the field of school psychology. In an Inside Fordham article in 2011, she discussed the role that spirituality might also play, noting that at the time, psychologists had neglected to consider constructs like hope, optimism, creativity, resiliency and forgiveness.

“Psychologists are now looking at spirituality as an inherent aspect of human life. Spirituality doesn’t mean just religiosity,” she said.

“It also implies an inherent sense of a person to relate to a higher being, to search for meaning, and to discover aspects of life that are transcendental.”

Fran C. Blumberg, Ph.D., professor of education who worked with Esquivel for 22 years, said she was a mentor to young female faculty, including herself, and a fearless leader who believed in social justice before the term became popular.

“She believed very much in process. She believed that you do the just and right thing for individuals, that everybody is given a voice, and that everybody is treated equally based on merits,” she said.

John Houtz, Ph.D., Bene Merenti Professor of Educational Psychology, noted that Esquivel was the first educational psychology professor—and the first woman—to rise from adjunct to full professor status.

“She came to play a major role throughout a decades-long time of transition from ‘old’ GSE to the ‘new’ GSE. Giselle wasn’t just part of the change, she was transformative to and for the school,” he said.

In 2002, Esquivel was honored with a Bene Merenti medal for 20 years of service. In her citation, she was lauded for giving Fordham “national prominence in the areas of bilingual psychology and educating culturally-different gifted students, and for publishing over 100 academic works and mentoring more than 80 doctoral dissertations.”

It also stated:

“In addition to her scholarly achievements, Giselle, with humor and a bent for thinking “out of the box,” has served for five years as chair of the Division of Psychological and Educational Services, responding creatively to the challenges of leadership, including the careful nurturing and mentoring of junior faculty.”

In addition to Cordero, Esquivel is survived by her son Daniel, her daughter Kristen, GSS ’14, and her brother Ruben Esquivel.

Cards and letters can be sent to the Cordero family at 106 Dellwood Rd., Edison, New Jersey 08820.

Giselle B. Esquivel, center, being honored in 2002 for twenty years of service at Fordham.

]]> 66205 Professor Gauges How Spirituality Influences Teaching https://now.fordham.edu/inside-fordham/professor-gauges-how-spirituality-influences-teaching/ Tue, 18 Jan 2011 18:31:06 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=9688 Giselle B. Esquivel, Psy.D., specializes in an area of psychology that did not exist when she began her career in 1982. A professor in the Graduate School of Education’s Division of Psychological and Educational Services, Esquivel has done groundbreaking work in incorporating positive psychology into the field of school psychology. While traditional mental health approaches in school psychology seek to alleviate social and emotional problems, positive psychology focuses on building resilience and enhancing the academic success and well-being of children. Esquivel has applied this framework to her studies of culturally and linguistically diverse children. “Traditionally, psychologists have looked at immigrant children in terms of their problems or deficits as a result of being English language learners,” she said. Instead, Esquivel has studied the strengths of bilingual children in the areas of creativity, resiliency and cognitive flexibility. She is currently studying spirituality as a protective factor for immigrant adolescents at risk due to migration and acculturation stress. Esquivel has extended her interest in spirituality to teaching in the context of higher education settings, with a focus on the relationship between faculty spirituality and style of teaching and interacting with students in the learning process. “In psychology, we have historically neglected to consider constructs like hope, optimism, creativity, resiliency and forgiveness,” she said. “Psychologists are now looking at spirituality as an inherent aspect of human life. Spirituality doesn’t mean just religiosity. It also implies an inherent sense of a person to relate to a higher being, to search for meaning, and to discover aspects of life that are transcendental.” Spirituality has been associated with a host of beneficial mental health outcomes, including reduced depression and higher self esteem. Yet its worth has been traditionally neglected in the context of education. Many educators and psychologists, including Esquivel, have argued for greater emphasis on faculty spirituality as integral to the mission and climate of higher education. To this end, she developed a measure of faculty spirituality with John Cecero, S.J., professor of psychology. “There are a number of spirituality measures that don’t necessarily assess spirituality as an integral part of a person’s vocation,” Esquivel said. She and Father Cecero hypothesized that spirituality would be a significant predictor of an effective teaching style, specifically one that is interpersonally sensitive and task-oriented. “As a pilot study, we surveyed 345 students and asked them to think of a professor who had spiritual qualities and characteristics, and to describe those attributes. Then we derived categories of what it means to be a spiritual faculty member based on students’ perceptions, and used those categories to develop a faculty spirituality questionnaire,” she said. In a larger study, students completed the questionnaire and a rating of teaching style along the dimensions of interpersonally sensitive, attractive (likeable) and task oriented. Four major factors emerged from the findings, suggesting that faculty spirituality manifests itself in four distinct ways: The first, altruism, emphasizes nurturance and concern for students. Altruistic faculty members, Esquivel said, demonstrate compassion for others and care about students as people beyond what they are learning. “They fall in with the Jesuit tradition of cura personalis,” she said. The second, transcendence, applies to faculty members who have a personal relationship with a higher being and are dedicated to daily prayer and spiritual disciplines. “They internalize a sense of transcendence to a higher-being relationship,” she said. The third, curiosity, is “an attitude of openness to the idea that life is more than what can be gleaned from concrete reality,” Esquivel said. The fourth, strength of temperance, is marked by self-control and humility in the context of care and concern for others. The higher a faculty member’s spirituality score in those areas, Esquivel said, the higher he or she was rated by students to be both interpersonally sensitive and task-oriented. “One did not preclude the other,” she said. “This means in talking to students about class materials or projects, these professors are sensitive to how they communicate. They care for their students. It’s a style of teaching and caring at the same time,” she said. “They’re supportive of their student in their learning process. They don’t see it as one-sided. It’s a relationship where two people are learning together.” Esquivel said the study enabled one to ask, “Can this teaching style be nurtured or taught?” “Is it totally intrinsic or is it something that one can develop? How can the faculty member convey that interpersonal aspect of spirituality to students so that they can say, ‘I identify with this professor who is there not just to teach, but who really cares if I grow as a person,’” she said. “Spirituality is not just for the individual; it develops a sense of community. I go back to that Jesuit tradition of educating the person for others in a caring learning environment, although this is more than a religious concept,” she said. Next, Esquivel will coordinate with Father Cecero to conduct validation studies of the faculty spirituality measure. “We will be looking at it in terms of generativity,” Esquivel said. “We want to know, as a mentor or faculty member, how does your spirituality relate to your purpose in fostering a sense of professional and personal meaning in students as the new generation?”

Giselle B. Esquivel, Psy.D., found that Fordham professors who were thought of as spiritual were also considered interpersonally sensitive and task-oriented. Photo by Gina Vergel

Giselle B. Esquivel, Psy.D., specializes in an area of psychology that did not exist when she began her career in 1982.

A professor in the Graduate School of Education’s Division of Psychological and Educational Services, Esquivel has done groundbreaking work in incorporating positive psychology into the field of school psychology.

While traditional mental health approaches in school psychology seek to alleviate social and emotional problems, positive psychology focuses on building resilience and enhancing the academic success and well-being of children. Esquivel has applied this framework to her studies of culturally and linguistically diverse children.

“Traditionally, psychologists have looked at immigrant children in terms of their problems or deficits as a result of being English language learners,” she said. Instead, Esquivel has studied the strengths of bilingual children in the areas of creativity, resiliency and cognitive flexibility. She is currently studying spirituality as a protective factor for immigrant adolescents at risk due to migration and acculturation stress.

Esquivel has extended her interest in spirituality to teaching in the context of higher education settings, with a focus on the relationship between faculty spirituality and style of teaching and interacting with students in the learning process.

“In psychology, we have historically neglected to consider constructs like hope, optimism, creativity, resiliency and forgiveness,” she said. “Psychologists are now looking at spirituality as an inherent aspect of human life. Spirituality doesn’t mean just religiosity. It also implies an inherent sense of a person to relate to a higher being, to search for meaning, and to discover aspects of life that are transcendental.”

Spirituality has been associated with a host of beneficial mental health outcomes, including reduced depression and higher self esteem. Yet its worth has been traditionally neglected in the context of education.

Many educators and psychologists, including Esquivel, have argued for greater emphasis on faculty spirituality as integral to the mission and climate of higher education. To this end, she developed a measure of faculty spirituality with John Cecero, S.J., professor of psychology.

“There are a number of spirituality measures that don’t necessarily assess spirituality as an integral part of a person’s vocation,” Esquivel said.

She and Father Cecero hypothesized that spirituality would be a significant predictor of an effective teaching style, specifically one that is interpersonally sensitive and task-oriented.

“As a pilot study, we surveyed 345 students and asked them to think of a professor who had spiritual qualities and characteristics, and to describe those attributes. Then we derived categories of what it means to be a spiritual faculty member based on students’ perceptions, and used those categories to develop a faculty spirituality questionnaire,” she said.

In a larger study, students completed the questionnaire and a rating of teaching style along the dimensions of interpersonally sensitive, attractive (likeable) and task oriented.

Four major factors emerged from the findings, suggesting that faculty spirituality manifests itself in four distinct ways:

The first, altruism, emphasizes nurturance and concern for students. Altruistic faculty members, Esquivel said, demonstrate compassion for others and care about students as people beyond what they are learning.

“They fall in with the Jesuit tradition of cura personalis,” she said.

The second, transcendence, applies to faculty members who have a personal relationship with a higher being and are dedicated to daily prayer and spiritual disciplines.

“They internalize a sense of transcendence to a higher-being relationship,” she said.

The third, curiosity, is “an attitude of openness to the idea that life is more than what can be gleaned from concrete reality,” Esquivel said.

The fourth, strength of temperance, is marked by self-control and humility in the context of care and concern for others.

The higher a faculty member’s spirituality score in those areas, Esquivel said, the higher he or she was rated by students to be both interpersonally sensitive and task-oriented.

“One did not preclude the other,” she said. “This means in talking to students about class materials or projects, these professors are sensitive to how they communicate. They care for their students. It’s a style of teaching and caring at the same time,” she said.

“They’re supportive of their student in their learning process. They don’t see it as one-sided. It’s a relationship where two people are learning together.”

Esquivel said the study enabled one to ask, “Can this teaching style be nurtured or taught?”

“Is it totally intrinsic or is it something that one can develop? How can the faculty member convey that interpersonal aspect of spirituality to students so that they can say, ‘I identify with this professor who is there not just to teach, but who really cares if I grow as a person,’” she said.

“Spirituality is not just for the individual; it develops a sense of community. I go back to that Jesuit tradition of educating the person for others in a caring learning environment, although this is more than a religious concept,” she said.

Next, Esquivel will coordinate with Father Cecero to conduct validation studies of the faculty spirituality measure.

“We will be looking at it in terms of generativity,” Esquivel said. “We want to know, as a mentor or faculty member, how does your spirituality relate to your purpose in fostering a sense of professional and personal meaning in students as the new generation?”

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