Systems Transformation for Equity in Education

MYERS EDUCATION PRESSISBN: 9781975509156

Principles for Organizational Change

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Sale price$93.99


By Betina Hsieh, Alejandra Priede, Tim Keirn
Imprint: MYERS EDUCATION PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
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Pages:
175

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Dr. Alejandra Priede is an Associate Professor in the Educational Leadership Department at California State University, Long Beach (CSULB). Dr. Priede's research is dedicated to enhancing research and program evaluation methodologies, institutional effectiveness, and the academic success and well-being of students and student teachers-particularly those from diverse backgrounds. She also investigates the identity factors and career choices of student teachers and early career educators. She earned her B.A. in Economics from the Autonomous Technological Institute of Mexico (ITAM) and received her Ph.D. in Social Research Methodology, specializing in program evaluation, along with a master's degree in Advanced Quantitative Methods in Educational Research from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). In addition to her academic roles, Dr. Priede has developed and facilitated wellness and mindfulness retreats and racial justice and healing circles for youth, undergraduate and graduate students, educators, and the broader community. Educated at UCLA and the London School of Economics, Tim Keirn is an emeritus faculty member in the Department of History and the College of Education at CSULB. His areas of peer-reviewed publication include eighteenth-century British colonial and economic history, and history education. Publications include British Encounters with India; "History Curriculum, Standards, and Assessment Policies and Politics: U.S. Experiences" in the International Handbook of History Learning and Teaching; and the co-authored article "Subject Matter Counts: Historical Thinking and the Pre-Service History Teacher," that won the American Historical Association's Gilbert Prize (2014). Tim has been awarded grants relating to secondary teacher preparation from the NEH, the U.S. and California Departments of Education, and the Ahmanson, Freeman, and Hewlett Foundations. He was Chief Reader for AP World History (2014-2019) and a trustee of The College Board (2019-2023). He currently is on the board of the OER Project for World History funded by the Gates Foundation. Dr. Betina Hsieh (she/her) is the Endowed Professor of Teacher Education and Teacher Learning for Justice at the University of Washington (Seattle). Dr. Hsieh, a proud second generation Asian American MotherScholar and former urban middle school teacher, has published widely in peer reviewed journals and presented over 75 research papers globally on issues related to teaching, teacher education, teacher professional identity, teachers of color, and Asian Americans in education. Dr. Hsieh's work focuses on how who people are shapes what they do (and the choices they make) as educators. She believes in the importance of educational research that is accessible to higher education practitioners, K-12 educators, community members and families, in addition to impacting the field itself. Dr. Hsieh's current research interests include identity-informed mentoring in education, the emergence and development of a teacher (and teacher educator) professional identity, teacher leadership, social media and teacher education, Asian Americans in education, and the experiences of teachers of color. Dr. Hsieh has published in K-12 practitioner-focused journals and magazines like Educational Leadership as well as being cited in the Atlantic. Recent research publications include articles in Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, the Journal of Teacher Education, and Race, Ethnicity and Education. Her book The Racialized Experiences of Asian American Teachers, co-authored with Dr. Jung Kim, is the first comprehensive research monograph focused on the experiences of Asian American teachers using the tenets of Asian Critical Race Theory. Her second book, Moments and Movements: Counterstories for Critical Asian American Studies in Education (Myers Education Press), co-edited with Dr. Roland Sintos Coloma, draws from scholar, educator and youth voices to center experiences doing the work of critical ethnic studies in schools and communities.

Acknowledgments Foreword by Anna M. Ortiz Introduction Chapter 1 Know the Context and Complexity of the System to Be Transformed Chapter 2 Ensuring Alignment in Design: Planning for Transformative Change and Finding Appropriate Funding to Support Change Chapter 3 Leadership Matters in Systems Transformation Chapter 4 Moving Forward Collectively: Relational Implementation of Systemic Change Chapter 5 Reflecting, Assessing, & Adapting: Keeping Nimble in Response to Challenges and Natural Cycles in Implementation Chapter 6 An Eye Towards Sustainable Institutionalization Chapter 7 Epilogue: Lessons Learned from the Caminos Project Appendix About the Authors Index

"Transforming the curricular and pedagogical core of an institution at the systems level is among the hardest work in higher education. Systems Transformation for Equity in Education: Principles for Organizational Change by Betina Hsieh, Alejandra Priede, and Tim Keirn walks the reader through how equity-oriented change can be planned, implemented, and sustained through collaborative leadership grounded in relationality, strategic resource seeking, and reflective inquiry. While the authors contributed to impactful and lasting outcomes, they never make the story grandiose or heroic. Instead, they narrate with rare candor, creating space for sharing vulnerability, navigating power dynamics, and honestly grappling with the dilemmas that leaders in transformative work so seldom feel permitted to name. An essential read for anyone committed to system-level change for a more humane and equitable education." - Taeyeon Kim, Associate Professor, College of Education and Human Sciences, University of Nebraska Lincoln "As an administrator and former faculty member, I was inspired reading Hsieh, Priede and Keirn's Systems Transformation for Equity in Education: Principles for Organizational Change. The Caminos project exemplifies the implementation of culturally responsive and sustaining programmatic change. Their description shows faculty, staff and administrators collaborating across silos to institutionalize practices that intentionally serve the Latine future teachers they set out to support. This book is critical reading for teacher educators, advising staff, and administrators trying to make similar changes. The team started with shared principles and committed to learning from and respecting the community cultural wealth of their colleagues and their students, and the result is institutional change that will last long after the federal funding is gone." - Jessica Zacher Pandya, Dean and professor, California State University, Dominguez Hills "The gap between equity as aspiration and equity as practice has never been more urgent to close. Hsieh, Priede, and Keirn make a compelling case that systems transformation can be bold, durable, and deeply humane, offering powerful principles drawn from the remarkable Caminos Project. Through institutional silos, a global pandemic, and relentless resistance, they not only survived but built something lasting. For educators and leaders ready to move from vision to action, this book delivers." - Roland Sintos Coloma, Professor and Associate Dean, Faculty & Staff Affairs, Wayne State University "This book is a treasure trove of insights and lessons for leading equity-driven change initiatives in higher education, particularly the regional state universities that crucially prepare so many educators for our schools. The authors offer hard-won insights into the real work of "walking the equity talk" in a university-wide effort to increase the Latine secondary teacher pipeline and institutionalize culturallyresponsive change." - Ann Ishimaru, Professor of Educational Foundations, Leadership & Policy and Killinger Endowed Chair, University of Washington College of Education

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