The Leadership Academy builds the capacity of educational leaders at every level of the school system to disrupt systemic inequities and create the conditions necessary for all students to thrive. 

Vision

Our vision is for all children of every race, ethnicity, and other identity characteristics  to have what they need to achieve academic, social, and emotional success  The Leadership Academy builds the capacity of educational leaders at every level of the school system to disrupt systemic inequities and create the conditions necessary for all students to thrive. We have found, and research confirms, that leaders are essential for pushing forward the work of disrupting inequities and transforming learning for every student. Specifically, we support and develop leaders to be culturally responsive, to recognize the impact of institutionalized racism on their own lives and the lives of the students and families with whom they work and to embrace their role in mitigating, disrupting, and dismantling systemic oppression.

 

"Equity" is used all the time in education, but what does that mean, what does it look like to truly lead schools and school systems in ways that disrupt systemic barriers, racist structures, and create learning experiences intentionally built to meet the needs of every child.

 

Fort Worth, TX Leadership Workshop

 

History

The Leadership Academy is a nationally recognized nonprofit organization. Started in 2003 as The NYC Leadership Academy with its groundbreaking, research-based Aspiring Principals Program, trained close to 600 principals, most of them women and leaders of color, who had served in some of New York City’s schools most in need of support and change. Seeing our initial success in New York City, school systems across the country began approaching us to help them develop leadership pipelines and strengthen leader practices.

 

Over the years, The Leadership Academy has sharpened its focus on the "how" of dismantling systemic inequities in schools: culturally responsive leadership. To date, they have supported 8,000 leaders in more than 200 school systems and educational organizations across 37 states and Washington D.C.  The organization supports aspiring principals, principals, principal supervisors, superintendents and other district leaders, and state education leaders.

 

In September 2020, The NYC Leadership Academy changed  its name to The Leadership Academy. Says President & CEO Dr. Nancy Gutiérrez  about the name change, “While we value and cherish our New York City roots, our vision is for all children of every race, ethnicity, and other identity characteristics to have what they need to achieve academic, social, and emotional success. We are reinforcing our commitment to building the capacity of education leaders within their context in communities across the country as a way to support real sustainable change for children.”

 

 Nancy Gutierrez, The Leadership Academy CEO, with students

Activities

The Leadership Academy offers workshops and professional learning opportunities that bring together education leaders from across the country to create learning communities for leaders at different levels of the school system.  They customize learning opportunities for school and school system teams to identify and address the needs in their context.  They also provide one-on-one and team coaching for school leaders and executive coaching for school system leaders.

 

Examples of Outreach:

 We need a new kind of education system — an equitable, culturally responsive system.

The Leadership Academy defined “culturally responsive leadership” as ensuring that every child and adult in a school community has what they need within an environment intentionally built for them to achieve academic, social and emotional success, regardless of race, ethnicity, language or other characteristics of their identity. Achieving this requires flipping current systems and structures on their heads. Consider what this could look like, as The Leadership Academy recently wrote in The74:

We need a new kind of education leader — a culturally responsive leader.

“Making these kinds of systemic changes requires leaders who recognize the impact of institutionalized racism and embrace their role in mitigating, disrupting and dismantling systemic oppression,” CEO Nancy Gutiérrez and Chief Access & Equity Officer Mary Rice-Boothe wrote in The74. “Leaders like this must first work on themselves by reflecting on their biases and beliefs. Only then can they move to publicly modeling belief systems grounded in equity; being responsive to, and inclusive of, student and staff cultural identities when making decisions; confronting and changing institutional biases that marginalize students; and finally, creating systems and structures that promote equity, particularly for traditionally marginalized students.”

 

To provide education leaders with new insight into the work of culturally responsive leadership, The Leadership Academy has released  “Culturally Responsive Leadership: A Framework for School and School System Leaders,”  a unique and innovative research-based set ofactions that weave culturally responsive actions across all levels of leadership from aspiring principals to superintendents. 

 

This framework revolves around eight critical action areas which underlie all of The Leadership Academy’s work:

Nancy Gutierrez, The Leadership Academy CEO,

consults with principals

 

The Leadership Academy’s consulting work may include some combination of the following supports

                             

                            West Michigan Leadership Academy

Audience/s served

Working with school systems, The Leadership Academy supports and develops leaders within the context of their communities and takes a systemic approach to addressing local leadership needs.  Leaders they support include aspiring principals, principals, principal supervisors, superintendents and other district-level leaders, and state education leaders. Since its founding in 2003,  The Leadership Academy has supported more than 8,000 leaders in 210 school systems across 37 states, who collectively reach more than 7 million students.

 

To consistently provide each student access to the learning opportunities they need to excel, schools need strong culturally responsive leaders. The Leadership Academy defines culturally responsive leadership as being able to recognize how institutionalized racism affects one’s own life and the lives of the students and families one works with, and embracing the important role in mitigating, disrupting and dismantling systemic oppression.

 

Culturally responsive leaders focus on academic success, cultural competence, and developing students’ and educators’ abilities to think critically about the world around them. They create learning experiences intentionally built to meet the needs of every child. Being culturally responsive is the work at the heart of making school systems more equitable.  We support school and school system leaders in using an equity lens to implement a vision, build strong school and district culture, set clear and high expectations, and develop and lead principals and teachers who ensure rigorous and culturally responsive instruction and the opportunity for all students to be successful.

 

Successful impact

Since our founding in 2003, we have supported more than 8,000 leaders in 210 school systems across 37 states, who reach more than 7 million students. Our partners report high levels of satisfaction in their work with us. After completing work with us, 96% of participants expressed interest in attending future sessions with The Leadership Academy; 94% of participants said the learning they engaged in developed their equity leadership skills; and more than 90% said they would recommend our work to a colleague. Read more about the impact of our partnerships with school and school system leaders in our 2020 Accomplishments Report.   

 

Example:

The Leadership Academy began working with Des Moines Public Schools, Iowa’s largest school district, in 2018 and has supported 71 associate principals and a dozen directors of activity and equity, helping them develop their culturally responsive leadership through equity-focused instructional walkthroughs and coaching in schools. They are strengthening their own coaching skills, learning to help principals give effective feedback to teachers and leading teams committed to dismantling inequities in classrooms and across schools. The Leadership Academy supported district leaders in developing and holding a series of virtual town halls to gather community member, staff, and student feedback on racism in the school district. The district immediately used feedback to create new positions to support school leaders of color across the district and create teams and accountability structures to move the next steps forward.

 

Recommendations for replication and/or adaptation

As part of our effort to expand our reach to as many leaders as possible, we have a number of resources and tools that we offer for free.

 Contact

www.leadershipacademy.org

Jill Grossman, 347-558-6464,  [email protected]