AAREA® 15th Annual Professional Development Summit – February 2-3 2024

AAREA® 15th Annual Professional Development Summit – February 2-3 2024

African American Regional Educational Alliances®' 15th Annual Professional Development Summit

Building Brilliance: Building Bridges

Join the African American Regional Educational Alliances for another year of action-driven problem-solving, as we come together over crucial challenges.

AAREA®’s 15th Annual Professional Development Summit returns in-person on Friday, February 2nd, 2024 at California State University – East Bay in Hayward, California

Online Registration Is Now Open!

Advanced registration pricing ends January 10th 2024 . Please call (510) 614-3000 with any questions.

 

ENGAGE. EXPLORE. EMPOWER.

The 15th Annual Professional Development Summit takes place on February 2nd and 3rd, 2024 at California State University – East Bay. Join us for another year of action-driven problem solving to advance the success of African American students.

This year, we gather our tools and get to work Building Brilliance and Building Bridges. Gather with members of your own team for expert-facilitated working roundtables. Together, AAREA will guide you in developing transformative blueprints to build supports for the African American scholars in your own educational community.

We encourage participants to attend with team members from their respective institutions. Examples of teams include but are not limited to: Equity Teams, Instructional Leadership Teams, School Sites (K-12, Higher Education, etc.), or Academic Cohorts. If you register as a solo attendee, the AAREA team will place you in the best group to maximize your PDS experience.

Plus! We invite you to attend a private documentary screening with post-screening discussion and reception the evening of Friday, February 2nd. This fundraising event is sponsored by 6:3 Media in affiliation with AAREA and PDS. Stay tuned for more information about this exclusive premiere!

In a time such as this, how can we as an educational community...

  • Cultivate African American students’ social and emotional well-being?
  • Combat and advocate against racism in classrooms and on campuses?
  • Strengthen relationships and community among African American families and our schools?

In the panel discussion and breakout sessions, participants will explore the following questions from their unique personal and professional perspectives:

  • How do we build and sustain strategic alliances with various stakeholders to support and advance the needs of African American students and their families?
  • How do we honor our past, embrace the present, and cultivate our future?

Our esteemed guests bring insights into building and strengthening strategic alliances and, with our participants, will facilitate discussions both galvanizing and crystallizing these efforts. Get ready to:

  • Discover a unique blend of vision, inspiration, and practical skills immediately applicable to your work.
  • Leverage a powerful resource to transform both yourself and your community.
  • Engage. Explore. Empower.

Advance Registration Rate

Advance Registration Available until January 10th 2024
$430

Registration includes:

  • In-Person Attendance Ticket
  • Access to On-Site Roundtables
  • Commemorative t-shirt
  • Curated music playlist to inspire Black joy
  • On-demand access to all workshop sessions after the event

 

 

Regular Registration Rate

Regular Registration (January 11th to February 3rd 2024)
$495

Registration includes:

  • In-Person Attendance Ticket
  • Access to On-Site Roundtables
  • Commemorative t-shirt
  • Curated music playlist to inspire Black joy
  • On-demand access to all workshop sessions after the event

 

 

Past Workshop topics have included:

  • Be the Dream: How to Inspire and Ignite Student Interest in STEM
  • Soil 2 Flower: A Leadership Development Framework for Families, Students and School Leaders
  • Career and Technology Education (CTE): ”The Answer for Closing the Achievement and Opportunity Gaps for African American Students
  • Freedom Through the Arts: Elevating Black Youth Voices through Explorations of Arts, History & Race
  • Promoting Culturally Responsive Programming for African American Student Engagement: Practical Strategies to Seamlessly Integrate Culturally Responsive Teaching into all Classrooms
  • Status Report on Black Girls in Oakland Unified School District: Challenges and Aspirations
  • Prioritizing Institutional Care: Fostering and Maintaining a Culture of Care for African American Students
  • The STEM STEPS Experience
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2024 PDS Speaker Lawrence Ross

We are pleased to announce Lawrence Ross as one of our esteemed PDS speakers. Ross, the author of The Divine Nine: The History of African American Fraternities and Sororities and Blackballed: The Black and White Politics of Race on America’s Campuses, is a renowned lecturer on race, diversity, and inclusion topics.
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2024 PDS Speaker Tanya Hernández

We are also joined by Tanya Kateri Hernández, internationally recognized comparative race law expert and Archibald R. Murray Professor of Law at Fordham University School of Law. She is the author of Multiracials and Civil Rights: Mixed-Race Stories of Discrimination and Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias and the Struggle for Equality.

Some Previous AAREA PDS Speakers:

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Dr. Lanette Jimerson

Dr. Lanette Jimerson is a writer, scholar and educator with 20+ years of experience helping equity-minded leaders bring forth their ideas through teaching and writing. Currently a professor at the University of Houston, Lanette has served as the director of U.C. Berkeley’s English Credential and Master’s program, a K-12 educator, and a literacy specialist.
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Dr. Kyndall Brown

California Mathematics Project/UCLA – co-author of “Choosing To See: A Framework For Equity In The Mathematics Classroom”.
Kyndall Brown has over 35 years of experience in mathematics education. He was a secondary mathematics teacher in the Los Angeles Unified School District for 13 years, teaching at both the middle and high school levels. He has been a professional development provider for over 25 years, serving as a mathematics resource teacher for the Los Angeles Systemic Initiative in LAUSD, and as mathematics teacher consultant for and director of the UCLA Mathematics Project (UCLAMP). He is currently the Executive Director of the California Mathematics Project, a statewide network of professional development organizations.
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Dr. Pamela Seda

California Mathematics Project/UCLA
Dr. Pamela Seda is an educational consultant with over 30 years of educational experience. She currently lives in metro Atlanta with her husband and four adult children. She is the owner of Seda Educational Consulting, creator of The VANG Game math card game, and co-author of the book, Choosing to See: A Framework for Equity in the Math Classroom.
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Regina ``Califa`` Calloway

Genealogist / Communal Wellness Artivist
Regina “Califa” Calloway, founder and creator of nzoCALIFAncestry, specializes in curatorial research of African-Ancestored cultural histories. She is a member of the inaugural class of the Midwest African American Genealogy Institute. Her Communal works utilizes Genealogy as a guided tool to cultivate vital roles of identity, personal transformation, and to advance cultural competence.
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Brandon Hughes

Producer/Director/Writer/Performer
Brandon Hughes is an Oakland native, and a multi-hyphenate Producer/Director/Writer/Performer. He has degrees in Theater, Film, and Television and Media from UCLA. He created and performs in the acclaimed one-man show, “The Absent Father, The Wayward Son,” and wrote the novel “The Man Behind The Curtain.” Currently, Brandon not only has productions in the works in the entertainment industry, he also partners with schools and organizations in creating entertaining educational videos, and leads a literacy and filmmaking program with our youth.
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Dr. Jabari Mahiri

University of California, Berkeley, Professor of Education
William and Mary Jane Brinton Family Chair in Urban Teaching; Faculty Director of the School’s educational doctorate (Leaders for Equity and Democracy) and for the School’s Principal Leadership Institute’s Masters degree program. He is Leadership Board Chair of the 21st Century California School Leadership Academies funded by the California Department of Education, a board Member and Governance Committee Chair of the National Writing Project, and the Faculty Director of the Bay Area Writing Project. He also is an Adjunct Professor for Columbia University’s Summer Leadership Academy. The most recent of his seven academic books is “Deconstructing Race: Multicultural Education Beyond the Color-Bind” (2017).
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Alicia Langlais, M.S.Ed, M.A.

Special Guest Speaker –  Integrating Arts Strategies to Cultivate Joy, Community, and Cultural Connections in the Classroom
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Dr. Darlene V. Willis

Concerned Parents Alliance and The College Bound Academy Programs; Author of “REVEALED:True Testimonials and Life Lessons on Covert and Blatant Racial Expressions”

Dr. Darlene V. Griffin-Willis serves as the Co-Founder/Executive Director of the family-empowered non-profit Concerned Parents Alliance and The College Bound Academy Programs. She served as an administrator at nationally recognized public and private institutions for more than twenty years and understands the importance of education, equity and cultural competence.

Dr. Willis is the author of a two books titled, “REVEALED: True Testimonials and Lessons Learned on Covert and Blatant Racial Experiences,” and Empowering Parents: A Guide to Taking Back Control of Your Child’s Educational Journey as well as the creator of “The Million Parent WAKE-UP Challenge.”℠ She is working on her third book challenging parents and caregivers to strategically manage their households while utilizing the Willis Family Model that has changed countless family situations at home and in the schools.