NESRI works with the DSC to
organize national advocacy campaigns and actions, and to share strategies and best practices through annual meetings, webinars and the Campaign's on - line resources.
Not exact matches
On Monday, representatives from the Council on American - Islamic Relations - a
national Muslim
advocacy group - met will sympathetic Capitol Hill staffers to discuss communications strategy and grassroots
organizing to counter Islamophia.
ACA provides
advocacy and evidence - based education and professional development, and is the only
national accrediting body for the
organized camp experience.
* Day 1 Monday, February 22, 2016 4:00 PM -5:00 PM Registration & Networking 5:00 PM — 6:00 PM Welcome Reception & Opening Remarks Kevin de Leon, President pro Tem, California State Senate Debra McMannis, Director of Early Education & Support Division, California Department of Education (invited) Karen Stapf Walters, Executive Director, California State Board of Education (invited) 6:00 PM — 7:00 PM Keynote Address & Dinner Dr. Patricia K. Kuhl, Co-Director, Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences * Day 2 Tuesday February 23, 2016 8:00 AM — 9:00 AM Registration, Continental Breakfast, & Networking 9:00 AM — 9:15 AM Opening Remarks John Kim, Executive Director, Advancement Project Camille Maben, Executive Director, First 5 California Tom Torlakson, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, California Department of Education 9:15 AM — 10:00 AM Morning Keynote David B. Grusky, Executive Director, Stanford's Center on Poverty & Inequality 10:00 AM — 11:00 AM Educating California's Young Children: The Recent Developments in Transitional Kindergarten & Expanded Transitional Kindergarten (Panel Discussion) Deborah Kong, Executive Director, Early Edge California Heather Quick, Principal Research Scientist, American Institutes for Research Dean Tagawa, Administrator for Early Education, Los Angeles Unified School District Moderator: Erin Gabel, Deputy Director, First 5 California (Invited) 11:00 AM — 12:00 PM «Political Will & Prioritizing ECE» (Panel Discussion) Eric Heins, President, California Teachers Association Senator Hannah - Beth Jackson, Chair of the Women's Legislative Committee, California State Senate David Kirp, James D. Marver Professor of Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley Assemblyman Kevin McCarty, Chairman of Subcommittee No. 2 of Education Finance, California State Assembly Moderator: Kim Pattillo Brownson, Managing Director, Policy &
Advocacy, Advancement Project 12:00 PM — 12:45 PM Lunch 12:45 PM — 1:45 PM Lunch Keynote - «How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of Character» Paul Tough, New York Times Magazine Writer, Author 1:45 PM — 1:55 PM Break 2:00 PM — 3:05 PM Elevating ECE Through Meaningful Community Partnerships (Panel Discussion) Sandra Guiterrez,
National Director, Abriendo Purtas / Opening Doors Mary Ignatius, Statewide
Organize of Parent Voices, California Child Care Resource & Referral Network Jacquelyn McCroskey, John Mile Professor of Child Welfare, University of Southern California School of Social Work Jolene Smith, Chief Executive Officer, First 5 Santa Clara County Moderator: Rafael González, Director of Best Start, First 5 LA 3:05 PM — 3:20 PM Closing Remarks Camille Maben, Executive Director, First 5 California * Agenda Subject to Change
She has received
national recognition for leading the organization's pioneering
advocacy and parent
organizing work.
From managing
national campaigns to
organizing issue
advocacy messages through thousands of volunteer contacts, Lincoln Strategy Group uses grassroots efforts to successfully achieve results.
«The students, their families, the educators (and indeed the entire country) need a
national independent, democratically
organized charter
advocacy group to advocate for independently managed, financially transparent, community oriented public charter schools as articulated in our manifesto.»
Tanya St. Julien currently serves as chief of staff at Leadership for Educational Equity (LEE), a
national leadership development organization that works with teachers to become civic leaders in
advocacy, community
organizing, policy, and elected office to improve education for all kids.
She lead a
national team dedicated to advancing the leadership of historically underrepresented communities in policy,
advocacy,
organizing and elected leadership, and deepening each sector's ability to govern for impact.
She has received
national recognition for leading the organization's pioneering
advocacy and parent
organizing work.
Our experience was related to
organizing for the Democratic
National Convention, but this was because the DNC was held where we live, not based on an assumption that only Democrats are worth targeting on animal
advocacy issues.
In 1994, Best Friends
organized the first Utah's Week for the Animals, a statewide promotion of pet adoption, spay / neuter and animal
advocacy that grew to include the first Strut Your Mutt, which has since blossomed into a
national grassroots fundraiser for animal rescue groups.
Areas of Expertise:
national policy, grassroots
organizing, environmental justice,
advocacy, diesel pollution, fossil fuels
She has
organized and managed education and
advocacy programs dealing with a wide range of energy and environmental issues, such as high level nuclear waste legislation, director of a solar installers» training and energy conservation installation program, coordination for numerous state, local and
national conferences / strategy workshops, and has assisted community - based groups in establishing job - training / energy rehabilitation programs.
Vicky Rateau is the campaign manager for Oxfam America's
national and international
organizing and
advocacy efforts around food security and climate change.
Mount Vernon, KY — Vote Hemp, the
national single - issue
advocacy group dedicated to re-commercializing industrial hemp, and Kentucky non-profit Growing Warriors, have partnered to
organize a planting of industrial hemp in Mount Vernon, KY on May 16, 2014, as part of the nationwide grassroots education effort Hemp History Week.
The ABA
organizes a
National Appellate
Advocacy Competition every year and divides it regionally into six locations.
host sub-regional youth
organizing training institutes across the U.S. and one
national youth
organizing conference to reach 1,500 young Americans with communications and
advocacy skills;
2) Work that responds to the structural harms and systemic barriers girls of color face through
organizing,
advocacy, base - building, and narrative - shaping efforts that are
national and local in scope.