Tyrone C. Howard is the Pritzker Family Endowed professor in the School of Education and Information Studies at UCLA. Dr. Howard is also the inaugural director of the UCLA Pritzker Center for Strengthening Children and Families, which is a transdisciplinary consortium of experts who examine academic, mental health, and social emotional experiences and challenges for California’s most vulnerable youth populations.
Maisah Howard, MSW, M.A. Ed is a former Children’s Social Worker with the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services. She has over 20 years of experience in child welfare working with children and families to keep children safe, engage extended family to secure lifelong connections for youth, coordinate necessary resources, and help to remediate the need for child welfare interventions.
Jaleel R. Howard, M.Ed is a doctoral student at UCLA in the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. Jaleel’s research interests center around urban contexts and social forces that affect the educational experiences and outcomes for chronically underserved students.
Kenjus Watson, PhD is the Program Evaluation Director of SF BUILD and is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Health and Equity Research Lab in the Biology Department at San Francisco State University. His research concerns the biopsychosocial impact of everyday anti-blackness and colonization (racial microaggressions) on Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color, and the potential of abolition to bring about a re-Indigenization of Education and greater wellness for students and communities.
Patrick Camangian, PhD is an associate professor in the Department of Teacher Education and Coordinator of the Urban Education and Social Justice Credential & Master’s program. His scholarship examines critical pedagogy and transformative teaching in urban schools; action research, critical literacy, culturally empowering education, and urban teacher development.
Earl Edwards is a writer, researcher, and consultant dedicated to working with institutions and organizations across multiple sectors to improve outcomes for marginalized populations. Focusing on education, housing, and racial equity, he guides his partners through several processes for complex systemic change using qualitative research methods. Earl has over 15 years of professional experience working on youth development, curriculum design, and diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Ramón Antonio Martínez, PhD is an assistant professor in the Graduate School of Education and the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity at Stanford University. His research explores the intersections of language, race, and ideology in the public schooling experiences of students of color, with a particular focus on literacy learning among bi/multilingual Chicanx and Latinx children and youth. He has published articles in journals such as Linguistics and Education, Research in the Teaching of English, Anthropology & Education Quarterly, Teachers College Record, and Review of Research in Education.
Dr. Oscar Navarro is an Assistant Professor of Teacher Education and Liberal Studies at California State University, Long Beach. Dr. Navarro earned his Ph.D. in Urban Education at the University of California, Los Angeles. His experience as a K-12 teacher in Los Angeles informs his scholarship examining the pedagogy, practice, and process of educators committed to racial and social justice. He was previously an Assistant Professor at California Polytechnic State University.
Clarence “La Mont” Terry, Sr. holds a Ph.D. in Education from UCLA with emphases in Urban Schooling & Mathematics Education. He is currently Associate Professor & Chair of the Education Dept at Occidental College in Los Angeles, CA. He teaches undergraduate classes on urban education, educational foundations, critical pedagogies and critical race theory. A former middle school mathematics teacher and instructional coach, Dr. Terry collaborates with K-12 educators, school districts, state departments of Education, as well as IHE partners developing culturally relevant pedagogies.
Jolan M. Smith, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the department of Advanced Studies in Education and Counseling at California State University, Long Beach (CSULB). In the College of Education, Dr. Smith teaches courses in assessment and evaluation of students withdisabilities, and positive classroom supports and collaborative models for inclusive settings. She also serves as faculty mentor to the Mary Jane Patterson Scholars, elementary, secondary, and special education credential students in the Teachers for Urban Schools Initiative in the College of Education. This initiative aims to support a pipeline of culturally responsive teachers to serve communities and students who have historically been marginalized.
Dr. Tonikiaa Orange serves as the Director for the Culture and Equity Project (CEP) and is the Assistant Director for the Principal leadership Institute (PLI) at UCLA Center X. Her commitment to education spans over 25 years and she has a focus on culturally responsive and sustaining pedagogy and is the co-developer of the Reciprocal Learning Partnerships for Equity Coaching Framework. As the Director for CEP and Assistant Director for PLI, her work focuses on preparing the next generation of social justice leaders to transform and create equitable and culturally responsive educational spaces for all students.
Elianny Edwards is an educator, applied researcher, and scholar. She is a certified K-6 teacher with over ten years of experience teaching, mentoring, and directing out-of-school-time programming for youth from underserved communities across the country. Currently, Elianny C. Edwards is an instructional coach for first and second year public school teachers in the Los Angeles Unified School District and an instructor of applied cognitive development in the Child and Adolescent Development Department at California State University, Northridge. Her research and scholarly interests include school safety at the intersections of race, class, and gender, the critical wellness and academic outcomes of Student of Color, and culturally relevant and sustaining teaching pedagogy.
JC Lugo is currently a PhD student in the Urban Schooling division at UCLA where his scholarly work examines the intersection of race, gender, and sexuality in schools by focusing on how Latino male high school students who identify as queer navigate and disrupt heteronormative schooling contexts. His work is grounded in his personal experiences as a first-generation college student and his professional work as a former high school teacher and basketball coach. He has also worked in student affairs as the coordinator of a male success initiative.
Dr. Andréa C. Minkoff is an Assistant Professor and Chair of the Child and Adolescent Development Master’s Program in the LaFetra College of Education at the University of La Verne. Her research and teaching interests include children’s developing understandings of race and gender, children’s language ideologies, literacy as a social process, teacher’s work and lives, and intergroup relations and identity development in the context of schools.