Leading While Female: A Culturally Proficient Response for Gender Equity

Author:   Trudy Tuttle Arriaga ,  Stacie Lynn Stanley ,  Delores B. Lindsey
Publisher:   SAGE Publications Inc
ISBN:  

9781544360744


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   17 August 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Leading While Female: A Culturally Proficient Response for Gender Equity


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Author:   Trudy Tuttle Arriaga ,  Stacie Lynn Stanley ,  Delores B. Lindsey
Publisher:   SAGE Publications Inc
Imprint:   Corwin Press Inc
Weight:   0.340kg
ISBN:  

9781544360744


ISBN 10:   1544360746
Pages:   160
Publication Date:   17 August 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

This book challenges us to look at educational leadership inequities with our eyes wide open, data in front of us, and a determination that we can do better. This book is about raising our voices to match our passion, dedication, and competency as female Educational Leaders. The barriers we encounter are both external in the form of sexist notions and internal in the form of those cultural mantras playing in our own minds. As women, we need to share our stories, which outline the barriers we have faced because those experiences are so pervasive. Understanding the enormity of the problem allows us to take more control of the future. This book gives us the tools and resources to find our own unique courage and the blueprints to build strong partnerships for this work. -- Rachel Gorton, Instructional Technology Coordinator This comes to leaders at an urgent and pivotal time in education. Gender inclusivity is necessary for all educators, but also for the students they serve. Nowhere else have the necessary advocacy, tools, and tangible actions been harnessed into a single book for leaders. Changing perspectives and creating actions that lead to an inclusive and diverse workforce is a challenging endeavor. However, it will create lasting experiences for students and empower the leaders and educators who serve them. Knowing about gender inclusivity is not enough: the authors force us to act on it. -- Jacqueline Perez, Ed.D., Assistant Superintendent A book about Culturally Proficient Leadership such as this, which examines the historic and current reality of gender inequity, is truly a must read for all leaders at all levels. In the name of striving for a pluralistic society, to move away from individualism towards collectivism-the questions in the book that ask 'Who Am I? Who Are We?' bring leaders to truly look into the mirror and identify whether their values and beliefs are reflecting back to them. Dr. Stacie Stanley's leadership defies the statistics of women of color in leadership, more importantly her story of 'becoming' as a leader in a male-dominated field for executive leadership is truly inspiring and an example of breaking the glass ceiling. Leaders will appreciate the Gender Equity Action Plan and Rubric to guide the work in order to make informed, systemic decisions that will increase women in leadership roles for the year 2020 and beyond. -- Dr. Naomi Rae Taylor, Educational Consultant Finally a book I can relate to as it speaks to the struggles, grit and perseverance women experience as we aim for equity and access in educational leadership. Leading While Female is the clarion call for access and equity in the arena of educational leadership. It reminds us that we cannot make changes in silence. It is a research-based book chock full of practices and real possibilities as we aspire towards an inclusive educational leadership landscape worthy of our children. -- Michele R. Dean, Ed.D., Field Placement Director & Lecturer In Leading While Female, Delores Lindsey, Trudy Arriaga, and Stacie Stanley hold up a mirror for all of us as we consider the inequity that exists in educational leadership. Unlike many corporations, education is a field where the majority of women are teachers, yet only a small percentage go on to become superintendents. Helping us to ask why and to when consider how we can all make a difference is the central focus of the book. We hear from women directly about their experiences and their journey. The authors' stories and those of the women that they interviews help us to understand the many facets of this challenge, and it is in these stories that we can see just how much we are all losing by not looking for ways to lift each other up in order to address the current inequities. This is an important book for our time. -- Brenda Hall, Co-Founder Throughout Leading While Female, I was struck by the importance of gaining allies in the work of leadership. The alignment between racial and gender equity allies is truly significant. Just as white leaders absolutely cannot stand by quietly as our leaders of color step up time after time, men cannot be silent supporters of gender equity leadership. -- Dr. Jenny Loeck, Assistant Superintendent Leading While Female is an essential work for educational leaders at all levels. It calls for opening space for those who makeup the majority of school personnel to more effectively lead for justice and equity. This voice has too often been missing in shaping policies, practices, and procedures. -- Ray Terrell, Professor Emeritus Gender equity is an educational issue for women and men school leaders as allies, advocates and mentors. Arriaga, Stanley and Lindsey provide school organizations and individual school leaders pathways for ensuring that schools and school districts have the expertise of highly qualified women educational leaders. The authors skillfully combine their personal experiences with current women's narratives that illuminate lingering barriers to leadership roles. Then the authors provide narratives that highlight successful personal and systemic pathways to entry-level and district-level leadership roles. -- Randall Lindsey, Professor Emeritus I am truly excited about the new book which Trudy Arriaga, Delores Lindsey, and Stacie Stanley have written about women raising their voices in the fight for gender equity. I am pleased that the authors are continuing the work which was begun in the book by Franco, Ott, and Robles, titled A Culturally Proficient Society Begins in School: Leadership for Equity (Corwin, 2011). It is hard work that must be continuously brought to light if change is to occur at levels equal to the population statistics for women today. The conversation must be ongoing, robust, confronting, and engaging and the three authors address this in Leading While Female. Through the efforts of Arriaga, Lindsey, and Stanley, and their acknowledgement of those who have gone before, the topic of gender equity will endure in the daily lives of women and those who inspire women to break through barriers to success. -- Dr. Carmella S. Franco, Consultant and Author Leading While Female is the journey and verbal testament of three women who speak to reveal the racial, classed, and gendered injustices they have witnessed as educational leaders as a means of healing, empowerment, and advocacy for a more humane present and future grounded in equity. Arriaga, Stanley, and Lindsey provide powerful counternarratives to interrupt the status quo, master narratives of male-dominated leadership roles, inspire male leaders to grow as culturally competent leaders and feminists, and to pave the way for future generations of women leaders from diverse backgrounds. -- Gilberto Q. Conchas, Professor of Education Leading While Female is a much needed and timely piece that thoughtfully explores the multidimensional experiences of women in educational leadership. The authors take an inside-out approach that encourages men and women to reflect and take action toward disrupting gender inequality. -- Dr. Jaguanana Lathan, Executive Director, Equity As someone who believes deeply that we need to find our voices around what matters, this book is a necessary and supportive addition to my bookshelf. The authors combine powerful statistics, personal narratives, and concrete strategies into an accessible and useful text both men and women can use to shift the conversation around gender equity at all levels in education. -- Jennifer Abrams, Communications Consultant and Author of Having Hard Conversations


As someone who believes deeply that we need to find our voices around what matters, this book is a necessary and supportive addition to my bookshelf. The authors combine powerful statistics, personal narratives, and concrete strategies into an accessible and useful text both men and women can use to shift the conversation around gender equity at all levels in education. -- Jennifer Abrams, Communications Consultant and Author of Having Hard Conversations Leading While Female is a much needed and timely piece that thoughtfully explores the multidimensional experiences of women in educational leadership. The authors take an inside-out approach that encourages men and women to reflect and take action toward disrupting gender inequality. -- Dr. Jaguanana Lathan, Executive Director, Equity Leading While Female is the journey and verbal testament of three women who speak to reveal the racial, classed, and gendered injustices they have witnessed as educational leaders as a means of healing, empowerment, and advocacy for a more humane present and future grounded in equity. Arriaga, Stanley, and Lindsey provide powerful counternarratives to interrupt the status quo, master narratives of male-dominated leadership roles, inspire male leaders to grow as culturally competent leaders and feminists, and to pave the way for future generations of women leaders from diverse backgrounds. -- Gilberto Q. Conchas, Professor of Education I am truly excited about the new book which Trudy Arriaga, Delores Lindsey, and Stacie Stanley have written about women raising their voices in the fight for gender equity. I am pleased that the authors are continuing the work which was begun in the book by Franco, Ott, and Robles, titled A Culturally Proficient Society Begins in School: Leadership for Equity (Corwin, 2011). It is hard work that must be continuously brought to light if change is to occur at levels equal to the population statistics for women today. The conversation must be ongoing, robust, confronting, and engaging and the three authors address this in Leading While Female. Through the efforts of Arriaga, Lindsey, and Stanley, and their acknowledgement of those who have gone before, the topic of gender equity will endure in the daily lives of women and those who inspire women to break through barriers to success. -- Dr. Carmella S. Franco, Consultant and Author Gender equity is an educational issue for women and men school leaders as allies, advocates and mentors. Arriaga, Stanley and Lindsey provide school organizations and individual school leaders pathways for ensuring that schools and school districts have the expertise of highly qualified women educational leaders. The authors skillfully combine their personal experiences with current women's narratives that illuminate lingering barriers to leadership roles. Then the authors provide narratives that highlight successful personal and systemic pathways to entry-level and district-level leadership roles. -- Randall Lindsey, Professor Emeritus Leading While Female is an essential work for educational leaders at all levels. It calls for opening space for those who makeup the majority of school personnel to more effectively lead for justice and equity. This voice has too often been missing in shaping policies, practices, and procedures. -- Ray Terrell, Professor Emeritus Throughout Leading While Female, I was struck by the importance of gaining allies in the work of leadership. The alignment between racial and gender equity allies is truly significant. Just as white leaders absolutely cannot stand by quietly as our leaders of color step up time after time, men cannot be silent supporters of gender equity leadership. -- Dr. Jenny Loeck, Assistant Superintendent In Leading While Female, Delores Lindsey, Trudy Arriaga, and Stacie Stanley hold up a mirror for all of us as we consider the inequity that exists in educational leadership. Unlike many corporations, education is a field where the majority of women are teachers, yet only a small percentage go on to become superintendents. Helping us to ask why and to when consider how we can all make a difference is the central focus of the book. We hear from women directly about their experiences and their journey. The authors' stories and those of the women that they interviews help us to understand the many facets of this challenge, and it is in these stories that we can see just how much we are all losing by not looking for ways to lift each other up in order to address the current inequities. This is an important book for our time. -- Brenda Hall, Co-Founder Finally a book I can relate to as it speaks to the struggles, grit and perseverance women experience as we aim for equity and access in educational leadership. Leading While Female is the clarion call for access and equity in the arena of educational leadership. It reminds us that we cannot make changes in silence. It is a research-based book chock full of practices and real possibilities as we aspire towards an inclusive educational leadership landscape worthy of our children. -- Michele R. Dean, Ed.D., Field Placement Director & Lecturer A book about Culturally Proficient Leadership such as this, which examines the historic and current reality of gender inequity, is truly a must read for all leaders at all levels. In the name of striving for a pluralistic society, to move away from individualism towards collectivism-the questions in the book that ask 'Who Am I? Who Are We?' bring leaders to truly look into the mirror and identify whether their values and beliefs are reflecting back to them. Dr. Stacie Stanley's leadership defies the statistics of women of color in leadership, more importantly her story of 'becoming' as a leader in a male-dominated field for executive leadership is truly inspiring and an example of breaking the glass ceiling. Leaders will appreciate the Gender Equity Action Plan and Rubric to guide the work in order to make informed, systemic decisions that will increase women in leadership roles for the year 2020 and beyond. -- Dr. Naomi Rae Taylor, Educational Consultant This comes to leaders at an urgent and pivotal time in education. Gender inclusivity is necessary for all educators, but also for the students they serve. Nowhere else have the necessary advocacy, tools, and tangible actions been harnessed into a single book for leaders. Changing perspectives and creating actions that lead to an inclusive and diverse workforce is a challenging endeavor. However, it will create lasting experiences for students and empower the leaders and educators who serve them. Knowing about gender inclusivity is not enough: the authors force us to act on it. -- Jacqueline Perez, Ed.D., Assistant Superintendent This book challenges us to look at educational leadership inequities with our eyes wide open, data in front of us, and a determination that we can do better. This book is about raising our voices to match our passion, dedication, and competency as female Educational Leaders. The barriers we encounter are both external in the form of sexist notions and internal in the form of those cultural mantras playing in our own minds. As women, we need to share our stories, which outline the barriers we have faced because those experiences are so pervasive. Understanding the enormity of the problem allows us to take more control of the future. This book gives us the tools and resources to find our own unique courage and the blueprints to build strong partnerships for this work. -- Rachel Gorton, Instructional Technology Coordinator


Author Information

"Dr. Trudy T. Arriaga currently serves as the Dean of Equity and Outreach in the Graduate School of Education at Cal Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks, CA. She continues to contribute to the field of education through keynote speeches, workshops, leadership and equity institutes, and professional development collaborations. Trudy has enjoyed a 40-year career in education, including 14 years as the first female superintendent for Ventura Unified School District (VUSD) before retiring in July 2015. Her early roles include working as a bilingual paraeducator, teacher, assistant principal, principal, and director. In recognition of her service, VUSD named its district office the VUSD Trudy Tuttle Arriaga Education Service Center. Dr. Arriaga is also a co-author of two books, ""Leading While Female: A Culturally Proficient Response for Gender Equity"" and ""Opening Doors: An Implementation Template for Cultural Proficiency.""  Dr. Stacie L. Stanley serves as the Superintendent in Edina Public Schools.  Stacie has served in a variety of education roles including classroom teacher, elementary school principal, math specialist, curriculum & staff development specialist, director of achievement equity, director of curriculum, assessment, and instruction and associate superintendent.    Stacie is a Senior Training Associate at the Center for Culturally Proficient Educational Practice and the co-author of Leading While Female: A Culturally Proficient Response for Gender Equity.  She is a fierce advocate for ensuring women are positioned to move into executive leadership roles – including a special focus on women of color.  She earned a doctorate degree from Bethel University in Saint Paul, Minnesota, where she researched the impact of intercultural development on K-6 administrative leadership practice.  Stacie is also an adjunct faculty member in Bethel University doctoral program in Minnesota, and a member of the Hamline School of Education Advisory Board.  She lives with her husband, and enjoys being an empty nester, taking long walks, and spending time with their grandchildren. Dr. Delores B. Lindsey retired as Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership at California State University San Marcos; however, she has not retired from the education profession. Her primary focus is developing culturally proficient leaders. She helps educational leaders examine their organizations’ policies and practices, and their individual beliefs and values about cross-cultural communication. Her message to her audiences focuses on viewing, creating, and managing socially just educational practices, culturally proficient leadership practice, and diversity as an asset to be nurtured. Her favorite reflective question is: Are we who we say we are? Delores and husband Randall, her favorite Sage/Corwin author, continue to co-write about the application of the four Tools of Cultural Proficiency. Her most recent publication, which is on the Bestseller list from Corwin, is Leading While Female, A Culturally Proficient Response for Gender Equity, with Trudy Arriaga and Stacie Stanley."

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