Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Creating a Shared Vision for Institutionalizing Racial Equity Melia LaCour, MSW Director, Equity in Education PSESD 2014, WASA Conference.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Creating a Shared Vision for Institutionalizing Racial Equity Melia LaCour, MSW Director, Equity in Education PSESD 2014, WASA Conference."— Presentation transcript:

1 Creating a Shared Vision for Institutionalizing Racial Equity Melia LaCour, MSW Director, Equity in Education PSESD 2014, WASA Conference

2 Goals for Today  To engage in self-reflection and exploration necessary for visioning for racial equity.  To define the terms fundamental to institutionalizing racial equity.  To understand the sense of urgency to lead with a racial equity lens.  To identify first steps to enhance your vision.

3 Stay Engaged Don’t Let your heart and mind check out! Experience Discomfort Agree to experience discomfort so that we can deal with issues of race in an honest way. Speak your truth Be honest about your thoughts, feelings and opinions. Say them in a way that is true for you. Expect and accept non-closure Accept that you will not reach closure in your understandings about race and race relations. There is no such thing as a “quick fix.” Intent vs. Impact Check for intent when impact seems to communicate bias The Four Agreements

4

5  Think of a time in your life when you realized race mattered.  Why do you think a focus on race is an important part of your leadership as superintendents?

6 “The most troublesome achievement gap [opportunity gap] is the racial gap—the difference in student achievement between White and Asian students and their Black, Latino, Native American, Southeast Asian, and Pacific Islander counterparts. Without question, poverty and wealth impact student achievement as well. Statistically, however, even within the same economic strata, there is an achievement gap based on race.” Glenn Singleton Why are we talking about race when we talk about the opportunity gap?

7 Changing Patterns “ As long as race, class, ethnicity continue to predict the life chances of some children in our nation, we must work within schools and school systems to identify related barriers and obstacles to opportunity and development, interrupt their negative impact and eliminate the persistent disparities in child outcomes”. National Equity Project 2012

8

9

10 What do our students see? Can they see themselves in the world of successful adults around them ?

11 If your are not outraged, you’re not paying attention… - Andrew Harvey

12 Lay It On the Line

13 Achievement Gap vs. Opportunity Gap Equality vs. Equity

14 Individual racism: Pre-judgment, bias, or discrimination by an individual based on race. Institutional racism: Policies, practices and procedures that work to the benefit of white people and to the detriment of people of color, often unintentionally or inadvertently. Structural racism: A history and current reality of institutional racism across all institutions. This combines to create a system that negatively impacts communities of color. structural institutional individual

15 Lack of opportunity and access

16 Person Call To Action…

17 Educational Opportunity Gap Oversight and Accountability Committee, 2013 Report  Decrease the disproportionate representation of students of color in disciplinary actions in schools.  Enhance the cultural competence of current and future educators.  Provide English Language Learner/Second Language Acquisition endorsement for all educators.  Create new English Language Learner Accountability Benchmarks.  Provide tools for deeper data analysis and disaggregation of student demographics to inform instructional strategies to close the opportunity gap.  Invest in the recruitment and retention of educators of color.

18 Step 5: Empower Our Children  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhribaNXr7A&t =10swww.youtube.com/watch?v=FhribaNXr7A&t =10s


Download ppt "Creating a Shared Vision for Institutionalizing Racial Equity Melia LaCour, MSW Director, Equity in Education PSESD 2014, WASA Conference."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google