Prologue; Henry Tran and Gaëtane Jean-Marie
Chapter 1. LGBT Educators’ Perceptions of School Climate Across a
Decade and Implications for School and District Leaders; Tiffany
Wright and Nancy Smith
Chapter 2. Did You Really Feel You Needed to Tell Us?”: Looking for
Leadership in all the Queer Places; Raymond A. Lauk
Chapter 3. The Way I See It: Segregation, Pre-Brown and
Desegregation, Post-Brown in an Atlanta School; Sheryl Croft
Chapter 4. A Psychology of Working Perspective on Women of Color
K-12 Educational Leaders’ Work Experiences; DorisAnn McGinnis, Jae
Young Kim, Ain Grooms, Duhita Mahatmya, and Ebonee Johnson
Chapter 5. Feminista Leaders: Testimonios of Aspiring
Superintendents in Texas; Dessynie Edwards, Tina Garcia, Monica M.
Muñoz, Teresa Silva, and Juan Manuel Niño
Chapter 6. Mending Fractured Pieces: Overcoming the Barriers for
Recruitment, Hiring, and Retention of Black Women Superintendents;
Francemise S. Kingsberry and Gaёtane Jean-Marie
Chapter 7. Keeping Patriarchy in Place: Mentoring to Keep the
Pipeline Status Quo; Sarah Margaret Odell
Chapter 8. Transforming the Education Workplace for Diversity and
Inclusion through Teaming; R. Lennon Audrain and Carole G.
Basile
Chapter 9. Towards a more inclusive generation: The Employment of
Teachers with Physical Disabilities; Noa Tal-Alon
Chapter 10. Cultivating Humanized and Inclusive Workplaces with
Talent-centered Education Leadership; Henry Tran and Zach
Jenkins
Epilogue; Lorri J. Santamaría
Henry Tran is an Associate Professor at the University of South Carolina’s Department of Educational Leadership and Policies. Tran is the editor of the Journal of Education Human Resources, the Director of the Talent Centered Education Leadership Initiative and Co-director of the Center for Innovation and Inclusion in Higher Education.
Gaëtane Jean-Marie is Dean of the College of Education at Rowan University. Jean-Marie’s research focuses on educational equity & social justice in P–12 schools, women and leadership in P-20 system, and leadership development and preparation in a global context.
The world’s space in which we find ourselves today sometimes looks
like what some of us familiar with the episodes of Stranger Things
have seen in the Upside Down. In that discernable space, we see
those who wish to hold or maintain power, spewing monstrous and
persuasive provocations of unfair advantages, partisan rivalries,
exclusive competence, and antagonistic relationships with disregard
for diversity, equity, and inclusion. Often we wait on that someone
to lead us to a Right-side Up portal, one that is a stable, bright,
maintained, and sustained—one in which we can contemplate fair
advantages, respectful rivalries, comprehensive excellence,and
positive relationships with high regard for diversity, equity, and
inclusion. Indeed, Editors Henry Tran and Gaëtane Jean-Marie have
captured the turbulent Upside Down within the pages of their latest
book. They, and the authors, represent that collective someone who
points scholars and practitioners in the education workplace toward
the contemplation of the Right-side Up portal.
*Beverly J. Irby, Ed.D. Regents Professor Senior Associate Dean for
Academic Affairs Marilyn Kent Byrne Endowed Chair for Student
Success Director, Education Leadership Research Center College of
Education and Human Development Texas A&M University; College
Station*
This is an exciting text that brings the marginalized experiences
to the center where it pivots the conversation and scholarship to
become the reality in the field that we need to be teaching and
talking about.
*Judy A. Alston, Ph.D. Director & Professor Doctoral Program in
Leadership Studies Department Doctoral Studies and Advanced
Programs Ashland University*
Leadership in Turbulent Times is a refreshing volume on P-12 school
leadership. Tran and Jean-Marie are keenly aware of the missing
voices, under-studied experiences, and enduring problems of
diversity and inclusion in P-12 leadership studies. Every chapter
is enlightening and exemplifies a critical multicultural leadership
approach to leading in today’s education workplaces.
*Hilton Kelly, Ph.D. Dean, College of Liberal Arts and Education
University of Wisconsin-Platteville*
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