2021_February

Message from the Dean

Greetings Everyone!

Mike HillisA new year is upon us and with it came some challenging moments over the past month. Each day seemed to bring a new “breaking story” and the news was seldom positive. And yet, light emerges in some unlikely places – often where there’s authentic human-to-human contact as people are able to drop much of the posturing that seems to be at play in today’s discourse.

This idea of authentic contact was reinforced to me at the website I discussed in my last newsletter: The On Being Project. As I previously noted, the website is dedicated to seeking ways to engage others in deeper ways to create a healthier discourse in society. In my last posting, I explored generous listening – the challenge for all of us to be present and open to each other even when we disagree. As I’m sure you will have experienced over the last 12 months, the challenge to listen generously has been a difficult task and remains an on-going test of our civility to one another.

As I thought about authentic contact with people, I realized that this is such a difficult time to achieve this. I’ve experienced, as I’m sure many of you as well, a dislocation from people over the last 12 months as we work from home, limitations of holidays with family, and diminished overall contact with others. Although Zoom has been a welcomed addition to our lives (for the most part!), experiencing authentic contact has been difficult to achieve. Consequently, when I reread the On Being website about its grounding virtue of hospitality, I thought a lot about what this might mean when we return to a semblance of normalcy. 

On their website, they provide the following explanation of hospitality:

Hospitality is a bridge to all the great virtues, but it is immediately accessible. You don’t have to love or forgive or feel compassion to extend hospitality. But it’s more than an invitation. It is the creation of an inviting, trustworthy space — an atmosphere as much as a place. It shapes the experience to follow. It creates the intention, the spirit, and the boundaries for what is possible. As creatures, it seems, we imagine a homogeneity in other groups that we know not to be there in our own. But new social realities are brought into being over time by a quality of relationship between unlikely combinations of people. When in doubt, practice hospitality.

I was struck by the phrase: “(Hospitality) is the creation of an inviting, trustworthy space — an atmosphere as much as a place.” One of the reasons this resonated is that the phrase brought back so many memories of environments I’ve stepped into through my life – both ones that were inviting and ones that clearly were not. For me, the most positive environments have been those places where as soon as I would walk in, I could sense warmth and welcoming. 

My most memorable example of this occurred over 20 years ago when I had moved with my family to eastern Tennessee. Feeling anxious about the move and trying to ensure that we were settled into the community, we quickly located a school for my daughter who was entering Kindergarten – Southside Elementary School, a school that to this day was the most inviting academic environment I’ve experienced over the years. The key? It became clear on a rainy fall day.

As we were dropping off my daughter at school, I was becoming increasingly irritated at the long delay entering the school’s drop-off zone. I was thinking to myself, “What’s the matter with these people? Have they never experienced rain?” As we inched to the front of the line, I realized why – as each car rolled to the front, the school’s principal was there to open the car door, hold an umbrella to shield the incessant rain, and walk the student up to the building, before repeating it for the next child.

I have shared that memory on multiple occasions through the years because it always epitomizes for me the selflessness of effective leadership and how it contributes to the establishment of a thriving community. For although a single act, the principal demonstrated “the intention, the spirit, and the boundaries for what is possible” within our communities when we care for each other. Perhaps we can do the same in the new year.

I wish all of you the best and good health,
 
Mike Hillis   

GSOE Vision: Guided by social justice and advocacy, we will reimagine education to disrupt inequities and to meet the future needs of students and communities


Department Highlights Counselor Education


 

Catalano, D. C., & Tillapaugh, D. (2020). Identity, role, and oppression: Experiences of LGBTQ resource center graduate assistants. Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, 57(5), 519-531. https://doi.org/10.1080/19496591.2019.1699104(Cal Lutheran Login Required)



Department Highlights Educational Leadership


Sharla Berry is the interim President of the Black Employee Association (BEA) at Cal Lutheran. She says, "...the group was created to provide networking, camaraderie, advocacy and support for Black faculty and staff and to celebrate and strengthen shared heritage, culture, values and aspirations." Feel free to contact her to learn more. If interested, check out other affinity groups available for faculty and staff.


Department Highlights Learning and Teaching



Cal Lutheran Graduate School of Education Adjunct Professor Hani Youssef, an Assistant Superintendent in Simi Valley Unified School District, is the recipient of the 2020 Administrator of the Year for ACSA Region 13 Leadership Matters.


CRLP News


 

California Reading and Literature Project Regional Director, Nancy Myers presented on "CRLP-RSD Art of Coaching Institute" at the Virtual 2020 Rio School District's Thrive Conference on December 2-3. The presentation focused on a two-year collaborative coaching institute with Rio School District. The presentation explained the process of selecting CRLP-RSD Teacher Leader Coaches for each school site and who will be learning about the transformational coaching model. These coaches will mentor their site colleagues using the CRLP Results Foundational Skills assessments and instructional routines across four levels.

This conference was open to anyone to attend all Thrive sessions (district personnel, students, community members). In total there were 1000 attendees over the two days at the conference.


GSOE Application Priority Dates


 

  • Counselor Ed – June 15 (Fall semester start)
  • DHH – April 1 (Summer semester start)
  • EDD – April 1 (Summer semester start)
    EDLD – March 1 (Summer term start)
  • TPP/SPED – March 15 (Summer semester start)
    TPP/SPED –July 1 (Fall semester start)
    TPP/SPED – November 1 (Spring semester start)

Student Highlights


 

Andrea Jacobo, who earned her teaching credential in 2020, was recently hired by Ventura Unified School District (VUSD) as a school counselor.


Triple alum, Alesandria "Ale" Posada '16, M.Ed. '19 and receiving her single-subject credential in 2017, was featured in the Moorpark Acorn article Chaparral Teachers Rise To the Occasionabout how Posada was able to keep her students engaged in classes through Socratic seminar-style teaching in a virtual setting.


Alum, Monica Madrigal Lopez '10, MS '13 in Counseling and Guidance with PPS credential, is the first President of the All-Latina school board in Ventura County as reported in this Ventura County Star article.


 

 

 

 

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