Luz Quiroga: Supporting Our Hispanic CDAs

September 24, 2025

Luz’s older daughter, Zarah, provided her with the inspiration to enter the early learning field. “Zarah was almost two years old,” Luz recalls, “when my family moved from Colombia to the United States in 2005. I wanted Zarah to learn English, so I enrolled her in Head Start, where I loved the interaction that I witnessed in her classroom. I was so intrigued by what was happening in Head Start that I volunteered in the program.” That was the start of a career that has brought her to the position of bilingual early childhood specialist at the Latin American Community Center in Wilmington, Delaware, where she works with children, families and teachers.

Luz is also a coach for the Early Childhood Innovation Center (ECIC) at Delaware State University, where she helps Hispanic educators earn a Child Development Associate® (CDA) Credential™. “I put my heart into helping these rising CDAs because I have firsthand experience of the challenges they face,” she says. “I get them inspired by telling them my own story to convince them that they, too, can succeed.”

When Luz came to this country, she had a college degree in business but didn’t speak English and the only job she could get was as a custodian in a medical supply warehouse. After a few years, she was laid off from the job, and it turned out to be blessing in disguise, as she explains. “I realized I had to learn English, go to school and gain new skills. Fortunately, my husband supported my goals by taking on a second job, allowing me to take English classes at Delaware Technical and Community College.”

After that, Luz had enough English to begin working on her CDA®, and that, too, posed a challenge,” she says. “It was hard to build my CDA Portfolio since it was only in English when I earned my CDA in 2008. The Professional Development Specialist who did my classroom observation didn’t speak any Spanish, so I had trouble understanding everything she said. Yet I managed to pass my assessment and earn my CDA,” Luz is happy to say. Though her English was still shaky at the time, earning the credential gave her a firm grasp of what it means to be competent in the early childhood classroom.

“The CDA is the first step in a career in early learning,” Luz points out. “It gave me a foundation in how to take care of children and keep them safe. You also learn about state licensing regulations, how to develop lesson plans, how to manage a classroom and how to work in teams. The CDA is a comprehensive credential,” she says. And it gave her the tools to get a job as an assistant teacher at the Latin American Community Center, where she has worked for nearly 16 years. During that time, she has served as a teacher, administrative staff member, and health and enrollment coordinator, roles in which she interacted with a lot of families on behalf of the Center.

Meanwhile, she also honed her English skills and advanced her education. In 2020, she earned an associate degree in early childhood care and education. In 2024, she completed a bachelor’s degree in education studies and a certificate in trauma-informed care to address the rise in behavioral issues among children since the pandemic. “I went through the whole educational process,” she says, “learned from my mistakes, and all this has taught me how to better support educators in their careers.”

She brings her experience and education to her work at ECIC, where she’s served as a CDA coach for about two years. Last year, Luz won ECIC’s coach of the year award, and she attributes this honor to the passion she brings to her role. “I have a lot of empathy and want to empower teachers so they, too, can reach their goals,” Luz says. She also feels a sense of community with the educators she serves, so her support for them goes beyond professional development to include ways they can practice self-care.

“Many of the women I coach are moms, and I know firsthand how exhausting it is to work, go to school and take care of a family, too,” Luz says. “Often, the women may also have immigration issues or suffer from domestic violence. So, I’ve provided a space at ECIC where they can relax, read, do yoga, and get a break from the challenges they face. We have many conversations, and they feel confident enough to tell their personal stories to me.” The educators’ stories touch Luz’s heart, and whatever issues they face, Luz strives to give the educators the courage to go on and reach their goals.

“For example, I coached a young woman named Ana who had diabetes and was suffering from domestic abuse,” Luz recalls. “She had no family in this country to help her. So, my colleagues at ECIC and I stepped in and helped her find a place to stay. Now, Ana has finished the CDA program strong and she’s going for her associate degree in September.”

So is a CDA holder who Luz supported as a PD Specialist, another way she gives educators support. It can also be a way for her to draw on her business skills, as she did when she visited a family child care provider named Alicia. “Her classroom was a little disorganized,” as Luz recalls, “so I helped her prioritize the materials and make improvements she needed to run a more professional program.” In addition, Luz has guided many Hispanic providers by boosting their computer skills, showing them the right way to write a report and ensuring they know the proper forms to share with parents.

Whether as a business advisor, cheerleader or coach, Luz puts her heart into supporting Hispanic early childhood teachers. She knows what it’s like to come to this country with nothing, so she’s made it her goal to help other struggling women build a better life. Luz has also passed on her sense of mission to her daughter Zahra. “She recently graduated from college with a major in sociology and a minor in gender studies,” Luz says. “Now she plans on becoming a lawyer so she can help women who face immigration issues or suffer from domestic violence,” among the same issues that Luz encounters in her work. “Zahra recently wrote an article on the challenges immigrants face when they come to this country,” Luz says, “and she’s still my greatest source of inspiration.”

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