麻豆破解版

Skip to Main Content
麻豆破解版 College

Autonomy, Equity and Collective Responsibility

With Ashley L. McCall
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
7:00 p.m.

Local governments, education institutions, and national decision makers are in the spotlight in the wake of the country鈥檚 response to America鈥檚 twin pandemics (COVID-19 and ). As we grapple with our relationship with independence/individuality and community interdependence, we are forced to consider the ways in which our choices or ambivalence cause and/or capitalize on harm and slow progress toward equity. In this session, participants are invited to consider the role autonomy plays in your personal and professional lives and what it takes to negotiate one鈥檚 desire for autonomy and our urgent need for equitable inputs and outcomes for all.  


Ashley L. McCallAshley McCall serves as a 3rd grade bilingual English/Language Arts teacher at C茅sar Ch谩vez Multicultural Arts Center on the south west side of Chicago and serves as a teacher representative on the Ch谩vez Local School Council. She works to incorporate social justice/civic engagement experiences (e.g. , ) Ashley works part time with The Academy Group and serves as a Learning Designer of the Justice curriculum. In addition to her classroom work, Ashley partners with teachers, families, and community leaders as a community organizer to address systemic education inequities and advance policies that improve her students鈥 classroom experience and the experiences of students across the state. Ashley was a lead author of the policy brief 鈥溾, published March 2018. She now sits on the Teach Plus board and supports the organization鈥檚 strides toward fulfilling its mission to empower excellent, experienced, and diverse teachers to take leadership over key policy and practice issues that advance equity, opportunity, and student success. Ashley graduated from Amherst College in 2012 with a BA in Political Science and Spanish and received her MAT from Dominican University.

鈥溾: A blog piece written by Ashley McCall from Chicago Unheard

 

Co-sponsored by the Education Studies Department