Agenda
01
PBS Video: Charlotte Hawkins Brown
Start
8:00 AM
End
8:00 AM
Registration & Breakfast
Start
8:00 AM
End
8:55 AM
Welcome
Start
9:00 AM
End
10:10 AM
Opening Keynote: The Legacy of Dr. Charlotte Hawkins Brown: Educational Equity in Action

This keynote will open the summit by exploring the life and work of Dr. Charlotte Hawkins Brown, emphasizing her contributions to Black education and how her legacy provides a foundation for today’s educational equity efforts. The keynote will draw parallels between the historical fight for educational access and the ongoing work of the DRIVE Task Force to promote racial and cultural diversity in North Carolina’s education system. Special attention will be given to the impact of desegregation policies, such as Brown v. Board of Education, and how they led to the displacement of many Black educators, contributing to the current shortage.


Participants will understand the historical context of Black education in North Carolina and its connection to current efforts to address systemic inequities in K-12 education, particularly the recruitment and retention of Black teachers.
Dr. Cherrel Miller Dyce
Start
9:15 AM
End
10:10 AM
Morning Breakout Session 1: "Culturally Responsive Pedagogy: Bringing History to Life in the Classroom"
Start
10:50 AM
End
12:00 PM
Morning Breakout Session 2: "Partnering for Progress: Spotlight on the Educators of Color Network’s Impact on Teacher Diversity"
This session will highlight innovative efforts and initiatives to recruit and retain a diverse teacher workforce in North Carolina, using data-driven strategies as a foundation for systemic change. Specifically, we would love for you to share the impactful work of the Educators of Color (EOC) Network, focusing on its recruitment, retention, and advocacy initiatives.
Candance Thompson
Keryn Vickers
Yvette Mason
Start
10:50 AM
End
12:00 PM
Afternoon Session: "Building Networks of Support: Strategies for Retaining Educators of Color" [Panel Discussion]

This session will focus on strategies for building supportive professional networks that help retain educators of color in North Carolina’s schools. Participants will learn about mentorship models, affinity groups, and professional development programs that support retention and growth.


Participants will leave with concrete strategies for building and sustaining support systems that retain diverse educators in their schools and districts.
Deanna Townsend-Smith
Eugenia Floyd
Kim Jones
Saletta Ureña
Start
1:00 PM
End
2:10 PM
Closing Session: "Empowering the Next Generation: Lessons Learned", Dr. Dudley Flood

In this facilitated Q&A session, participants will reflect on the themes of the day and discuss the practical steps they can take to implement the lessons learned. The discussion will include how educators and coalition members can continue to push forward the goals of the DRIVE Task Force and advocate for lasting systemic change.


Participants will leave with a clear action plan and a renewed commitment to advancing educational equity in their schools and communities, guided by the lessons learned from Dr. Charlotte Hawkins Brown’s legacy.
Dr. Dudley Flood
Start
2:15 PM
End
3:00 PM
Closing
Start
3:00 PM
End
3:00 PM
Speakers
Others

Candance Thompson

Candance Thompson

Deanna Townsend-Smith

Deanna Townsend-Smith

Dr. Cherrel Miller Dyce

Dr. Cherrel Miller Dyce
Cherrel Miller Dyce is an Associate Professor and Executive Director of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the School of Education at Elon University. With twenty years of experience in social justice work, she is a fierce social justice advocate, K-20 researcher, mentor, and social theorist. Dr. Dyce believes in uplifting marginalized communities through education. She emphasizes racial equity, social justice, and critical self-reflection in all research projects. Dr. Dyce is a diversity, equity, and inclusion consultant who provides professional development in the area of racial equity for public and charter schools, higher education institutions, and private organizations. She has published many journal articles and two books. Her recent co-authored book is Black Males Matter: A Blueprint for Creating School and Classroom Environments to Support Their Academic and Social Development. Dr. Dyce’s faith is central to how she navigates her personal, professional, and academic endeavors. Her mission statement is, “I want my work to resonate in the souls of humanity, cast down inferiorities, mute institutions of power, capsulate privilege and discrimination, and eradicate racism.” 

Dr. Dudley Flood

Dr. Dudley Flood

Dudley E. Flood was born and reared in Winton, North Carolina. Since 1970, Dr. Flood has lived in Raleigh, North Carolina.

He began his career as a teacher of math, science and English at the eighth grade level. He later taught high school social studies and coached high school basketball and football. He served for three years as principal of a school covering grades 1 - 12 before joining the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction as a specialist in school desegregation and race relations.

During his 21 years of service with the Department of Public Instruction, he earned promotions first to Assistant and then Associate State Superintendent. After retiring from Public Instruction on December 31, 1990, he served for 5 years and 3 months as Executive Director of the North Carolina Association of School Administrators. Since April 1996, he has been a lecturer and consultant to groups throughout the country and abroad.

He has been a Visiting Professor at Meredith College and at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, and has taught in the Principals Executive Program at the University of North Carolina.

He earned the bachelor’s degree from North Carolina Central University, the master’s degree in educational administration from East Carolina University and the doctorate degree in the same field from Duke University. He has studied further at Elizabeth City State University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Hampton University.

Dr. Flood has spoken in all 100 of North Carolina's counties. Also, he has spoken or conducted workshops in 48 of the 50 United States, in Bermuda, the District of Columbia, Canada, and Germany. His writings have been published in more than 25 journals and he has authored three books.

He has received more than 350 awards for civic service. He has been presented the Order of the Longleaf Pine Award (North Carolina's highest civic award), by three different Governors; Governor James G. Martin, Governor James B. Hunt, Jr., and Governor Mike Easley. He has received the Outstanding Alumni Award from both North Carolina Central University and East Carolina University, and has received the Doctorate of Humane Letters from both North Carolina Central University and the University of North Carolina in Asheville.

He served for twelve years on the Board of Governors of the University of North Carolina. He currently serves on the N. C. Minority Cancer Awareness Action Team; the Public School Forum of North Carolina Board; the Wake Education Partnership Leadership Council; the UNC Press Advancement Council and on several other boards and committees. He is a member of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity and of Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity. He is also a member of Martin Street Baptist Church in Raleigh where he serves as Sunday School Teacher. For fifty-five years, he was married to the late Barbara Thomas Flood whose inspiration he credits with any success that he has experienced.

Eugenia Floyd

Eugenia Floyd

Eugenia Floyd is the 2021 Burroughs Wellcome Fund North Carolina Teacher of the Year. Prior to this position, she was a fourth grade Teacher at Mary Scroggs Elementary School. Eugenia is a product of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools, the district in which she teaches. After Eugenia received a degree in History from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 2009, she became a teacher assistant. She then received her teaching credentials from North Carolina Central University in 2013. Eugenia also holds a Master in Gifted Education from Elon University, which she obtained in 2020. Eugenia is excited to advocate and support both the students and teachers of North Carolina. 

 

Jamie Latham

Jamie Latham

Keryn Vickers

Keryn Vickers

Kim Jones

Kim Jones

Mary D. Williams

Mary D. Williams

Matthre Scialdone

Matthre Scialdone

Saletta Ureña

Saletta Ureña
Saletta Ureña is an ELA teacher at Kiser Middle School. A native of Greensboro, North Carolina, she received dual B.A. degrees from North Carolina State University in Spanish Language & Literature and Communication with a concentration in Public Relations as well as an academic minor in Political Science. As a twenty-year veteran classroom teacher, Saletta brings charisma, compassion, creativity and support to the profession. A stark advocate for public education, she is a member of the National Education Association, the North Carolina Association of Educators and the Guilford County Association of Educators. Her commitments to the organizations include:

  • NEA Equity Leader
  • NCAE Instructional Leadership Institute Graduate
  • NEA Black Caucus, NEA Hispanic Caucus, NEA Peace and Justice Caucus and NCAE Black Caucus member

As an educator, Saletta follows her church’s motto of “Everybody is Somebody’. She is dedicated to fostering second language proficiency and cultural sensitivity. Her classroom focus is on advocating for social and racial justice and thus she has created a Spanish curriculum to both decolonize Latin American history and educate on marginalized communities within the Spanish-Speaking world. Equity advocacy compels her to take action to uncover, confront and respond to racial injustice and inequity in her school and curriculum.

In addition, she is the proud parent of Lincoln, Jefferson, Jacqueline and Joel. An active mother and teacher she believes, “We make a living by what we get, but make a life by what we give.” – Winston Churchill

Yvette Mason

Yvette Mason
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