“…Indeed, Cervantes‐Soon, Palmer, Heiman, Dorner, and other scholars have called for the necessity of critical consciousness in DL education: the ability to “reflectively discern the differences in power and privilege rooted in social relationships that structure inequalities and shape the material conditions of our lives” as well as to “recogniz[e] one’s role in these dynamics” (Cervantes‐Soon et al, 2017, p. 3; see also Palmer et al, 2019). They and others have argued that critical consciousness and sociopolitical consciousness must be developed when future DL educators are in their teacher training programs (Cervantes‐Soon et al, 2017; J. Freire, 2020; Rodríguez‐Mojica, Briceño, & Muñoz‐Muñoz, 2019). Similarly, Flores and Chaparro (2018) suggested that DL teacher training should integrate a materialist antiracist approach to form DL educators into language activists who are informed and consequently challenge the sociopolitical factors (e.g., poverty, racism) that continue to marginalize and oppress language‐minoritized students.…”