ADVANCING RESEARCH, IMPROVING EDUCATION                               

The National Center for Family and Community Connections with Schools

Supporting School, Family, and Community Connections to Increase School Success

About the Center

Connection Collection

Annotation from the Connection Collection

You are viewing a record from the Connection Collection, a searchable annotated bibliography database. It links you with research-based information that you can use to connect schools, families, and communities.

Title:Transfomative leadership in Latino communities: A critical element in successful and sustainable educational change
Author:Rodriguez, R. G., & Villarreal, A.
Year:2002
Resource Type:Journal Article
Publication
Information:
NABE News, May/June 2002
Connection:School-Community
Education Level:Elementary, Middle, High, Post-Secondary, Early Childh
Literature type:Conceptual and Theoretical

Annotation:
This article provides some thoughts and insights on the characteristics of transformative leadership in Latino communities that champions educational equity and excellence for all students, based on experience and promising practices, lessons learned, and opportunities for changing leadership gleaned from evaluations provided by ENLACE (Engaging Latino Communities in Education) grantees. ENLACE provides resources to kindergarten through college graduation partnerships that propose to increase graduation rates of Latino students from high schools and universities. ENLACE is supported by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and the Intercultural Development Research Association. Nine key assumptions are proposed to form a conceptual framework for building transformative leadership, based on the integration of three critical dimensions of leadership Ð community consciousness, commitment, and skills. The assumptions are: (1) visionary (2) community consciousness (3) power (4) life experiences (5) imagination (6) reflection (7) catalysts (8) valuing perspective and (9) inspiration. The authors concluded that, different from past leadership modes transformative leaders facilitate a dynamic process of learning, whereby diverse groups come to decisions in their own time and in their own time. They use the community base as an environment to achieve change, while simultaneously involving and serving its constituents. They see the community as a partner in change, a resource, and as a client. These assumptions are critical to practitionersÕ developing sustainable and community-conscious schools that provide opportunities for Latino students to succeed, graduate, and exercise their options as adults.

Suggested Citation Style:

Free Webinar Series
The U.S. Department of Education and its partners invite you to view the archive for the webinar, Bringing it All Together: Family and Community Engagement Policies in Action, which took place on November 16, 2011.

This is the ninth and final webinar in the series, Achieving Excellence and Innovation in Family, School, and Community Engagement.