Educational leadership spaces often privilege dominant narratives, leaving leaders from historically marginalized communities, particularly women, women of color, and Black women, navigating systems that were not designed with them in mind. This session centers the experience of leading from the margins and offers leaders both validation and practical tools to sustain themselves while continuing equity-centered work.
Grounded in doctoral research, district leadership practice, and lived experience, this workshop explores the power of critical reflection, storytelling as resistance, and intentional coping strategies for leaders operating at the intersections of race, gender, and power. Participants will engage in structured reflection, shared narrative practices, and planning tools designed to support clarity, agency, and resilience when systems fail to change
The session intentionally creates a brave, supportive space where leaders can reflect honestly, hear lived experiences, and leave with renewed purpose and concrete strategies for navigating inequitable systems.
Key Audience Takeaways- Explore how race, gender, and systemic inequities shape leadership identity and decision-making.
- Apply critical reflection and storytelling as tools for clarity, advocacy, and resilience.
- Identify strategic practices, including support networks, boundary-setting, and preemptive planning, to navigate inequitable systems with clarity and conviction.