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New Ascend Fellows Announced at the Aspen Institute

2022 Aspen Institute Ascend Fellow Layla Zaidane (Aspen Institute)

For 10 years, Ascend at the Aspen Institute has worked with families and partners to generate educational success and economic mobility. 鈥淏reaking the cycle of intergenerational poverty starts by changing the trajectory for our youngest children and families in early childhood,鈥 says Anne Mosle, vice president of the Aspen Institute and founder and executive director of Ascend.

The is an 18-month 鈥減ersonal and collective leadership journey.鈥 Five provided their impressions of the experience so far, sharing their stories and their visions for change. (Early Learning Nation also another 2022 Fellow, Jovanna Archuleta, assistant secretary for Native American Early Education & Care with the New Mexico Early Childhood & Care Department.)

Walking Side by Side to Build a Pro-Immigrant Electorate

鈥淚t truly was transformative,鈥 says Roxana Norouzi of the Aspen Ascend Fellows convening that took place in August. As the leader of , an immigrant advocacy organization in Washington State, she credits Aspen鈥檚 commitment to equity and its extensive and vibrant network. 鈥淭he other fellows and I took part in a thoughtful interrogation into leadership, with the added luxury of internal reflection.鈥 Norouzi singled out a storytelling session led by Lori Severens, Ascend鈥檚 associate director for leadership and design, as particularly meaningful.

OneAmerica was founded by Pramila Jayapal (now a U.S. Representative) in the wake of 9/11 as immigrant and refugee communities were being targeted by anti-immigrant hate crimes, surveillance and government targeting, and the organization has now advocated for immigrant rights and immigration reform for two decades. After nine years with OneAmerica, Norouzi moved into the role of executive director in the middle of last year. Recognizing that little progress had been made on building pathways to citizenship for undocumented community members who came seeking a better life and who deserve the safety, security and belonging that legal status provides, she decided to embark on a new strategy.

鈥淲e鈥檙e building grassroots power, political power,鈥 she says, 鈥渟o we can see a different world in 10-20 years.鈥

鈥淥ur early learning campaign is a big part of that,鈥 she continues. 鈥淗ow can we build the child care workforce and increase their earning power without displacing the current workforce?鈥 For Norouzi and One America, the answer lies in organizing parents, workers and other organizations. This fieldwork requires patience, determination and, above all, a willingness to walk side by side with the people in her state most affected by policy failures. 鈥淚mmigration status is their number one issue,鈥 she reports. 鈥淭he second most important issue is education. They want to build a better life.鈥 These priorities hold true for the Latino immigrants living in the eastern part of the state as well as the African and Southeast Asian immigrants living in and around Seattle.

The daughter of Iranian immigrants, Narouzi grew up in suburban Seattle and remembers teachers treating her bilingual skills as a deficit to be overcome instead of a brain-building asset. Because her mother worked in child care, she鈥檚 always been conscious of how society undervalues the profession and the people who practice it.

鈥淲e鈥檙e building a pro-immigrant electorate,鈥 she asserts.

Chasing Big, Bold Ideas to Build High-Quality, Equitable, Culturally Responsive Systems

Erin Arango-Escalante鈥檚 title at the Wisconsin Department of Children and Families is administrator of the Division of Early Care and Education, but she describes herself as a 鈥渄ot connector.鈥 鈥淪upporting young learners,鈥 she says, 鈥渞equires a multigenerational approach and every sector.鈥 The state鈥檚 , which Arango-Escalante helped form, fosters collaboration at the cabinet level among such unlikely partners as Economic Development, Transportation, Revenue and Corrections. This work also involves engaging with and listening to parents and caregivers from urban, rural and Native American communities.

Arango-Escalante with her husband Alex

If there is a silver lining to the pandemic, Arango-Escalante says, it鈥檚 the way business has started paying more attention to early care and education. The infusion of federal dollars has supported new efforts in Wisconsin to leverage this spirit, including the program, which supports businesses to offer child care as a benefit, and the program, which supports the creation of new child care businesses and helps existing providers to expand. 鈥淲e all need to work together,鈥 she says, 鈥渏ust to keep the child care industry intact.鈥

Although the Wisconsin official grew up in the Dairy State, Arango-Escalante had formative career experience in New York City, working with neurodivergent children and their families. She recalls providing in-home care for twin boys in the Bronx, modeling tips and tricks for their single mom. Community members got used to seeing her visit. They saved her a parking spot, and they even washed her car while she was up in the apartment with the boys. 鈥淚鈥檒l never forget that love and respect,鈥 says Arango-Escalante, who remains in touch with the mother.

If complex families and family histories make her work more difficult, they also make it more personal. Until her teenage years, she didn鈥檛 know that she had Puerto Rican roots. (Her maiden name was Pedersen-McCann.) This discovery, her marriage to a Colombian immigrant and the birth of her two children, form part of what she calls 鈥渁n identity journey鈥 that energizes her commitment to equity.

The Ascend Fellowship is challenging Arango-Escalante to reflect on who she is as a leader. Gathering with the other fellows for the first time in Aspen, Colo., inspired her to chase big, bold ideas. 鈥淭his is a moment,鈥 she says, 鈥渢o build high-quality, equitable, culturally responsive systems.鈥

Battling the Black Maternal Health Crisis with Solutions

鈥淲e don鈥檛 have time for this madness,鈥 says Twylla Dillion, the executive director of . She鈥檚 talking about the Black maternal health crisis that鈥檚 keeping her up at night. Black, American Indian and Alaska Native women are two to three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than white women, .

Personal experience has shaped her determination, as well as an MBA and Ph.D. in Health Services Research, Policy and Outcomes. When she had her first baby at 18, the experience of childbirth was traumatizing even though she had the support of her mother and her grandmother, a trained midwife.  鈥淚t was awful,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he process was broken.鈥 When she had babies later in life, she was better informed and took steps to take more control of the situation.

Dillion notes that birth doulas have existed informally for a long time. Now that studies , she wants to ensure that legislators don鈥檛 add hurdles like licensure. 鈥淪ome people want to make it fit into a 鈥榗olonizer鈥 model,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey want to impose a clinical mentality, when what鈥檚 needed most is mutual trust and understanding.鈥

Dillion describes the gathering in Aspen as simultaneously grounding and propelling. 鈥淲e saw ways we fit together,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 always what any of us expected, but it was always mind-opening.鈥

The Fellowship is already motivating her to embrace a more liberated way of working nationwide and in her hometown of Rochester, New York, which has some of the worst infant outcomes in the nation. (.) Her ambitious to-do list includes determining new ways to measure success, empowering doulas and birth workers to own their data, and somehow compelling the health care sector to stop identifying race as a risk factor. (As Dorothy Roberts writes in “Race is not a biological category that is politically charged. It is a political category that has been disguised as a biological one.”)

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a battle I鈥檒l still be fighting when I am an old woman,鈥 Dillion says.

Learning a New Language.  鈥淟iberatory,鈥 Anyone?

There are many kinds of diversity. Chris Bennett, founder of , is the only for-profit professional in the current crop of Ascend Fellows. 鈥淚 felt like an alien,鈥 he jokes about the August convening.

Although he grew up in Miami, Bennett has spent his entire adult life in Silicon Valley and says that he and his startup embody the ethos of the technology sector. The nonprofit leaders, he says, are opening his mind to different ways of thinking, and he is even learning new vocabulary. Liberatory design, for example, as , is a process and practice to

  • Create designs that help interrupt inequity and increase opportunity for those most impacted by oppression
  • Transform power by shifting the relationships between those who hold power to design and those impacted by these designs
  • Generate critical learning and increased agency for those involved in the design work

Bennett states, 鈥淭hat gave me a new word to use when we talk about what we do, which is helping people help themselves and their communities.鈥 The Wonderschool platform matches parents with child care providers around the country. The company also contracts with businesses interested in providing a valuable perk to their employees, and with cities, states and counties around the country.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing a lot of demand these days,鈥 he says.

Although Bennett is unashamed to claim profit as a motive, he underscores Wonderschool鈥檚 community benefits, pointing out that children with access to high-quality early education today have higher rates of college admission and lower rates of incarceration tomorrow.

鈥淎dding value to the community,鈥 he says, 鈥渋s like planting a tree.鈥

Building Young Leaders = Multiplier Effect

Layla Zaidane, president and CEO of the (MAP), didn鈥檛 always think of young children as a focus of her organization. Designed to promote bipartisanship and to engage young policymakers in solutions to make government work, MAP addresses a range of issues, from climate to justice to workers鈥 rights. 鈥淲hen you think about it,鈥 she reflects, 鈥渨ho does dysfunction harm most? It鈥檚 the youngest Americans.鈥

In Aspen, Ascend fellows took part in Socratic dialogues that compelled them to question motivations and rethink long-held assumptions. The introspective, sometimes uncomfortable, process mirrors the ordeal our country needs to go through in order to restore democracy. 鈥淪eparating style from substance isn鈥檛 always quick or easy,鈥 Zaidane notes, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 something we need to do.鈥

Zaidane grew up in the New York suburbs in a family of Moroccan immigrants. She initially planned a career in international relations, and shifting to the domestic landscape with MAP is calling upon her to engage multiple layers of her identity 鈥 not just as an Arab American woman but as a self-described chameleon and as a Millennial, which like any generational handle contains a bundle of contradictions.

Are they tolerant and empathetic, or impatient and cynical? All of the above? 鈥淢AP aims to make our institutions function better,鈥 she says, and it starts with hearing each other out. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not solving problems if we鈥檙e not listening,鈥 she asserts.

One of Zaidane鈥檚 chief goals in the coming year is launching an innovation lab鈥攁 collaborative and inclusive space within MAP to equip young people with the tools to be successful at the state level, where some of the nastiest partisanship has taken root. 鈥淏ecoming a better leader is one thing,鈥 she says. 鈥淗elping build up other leaders is where the multiplier effect comes in.鈥

The Ascend Fellowship is helping her realize this vision. 鈥淎nne Mosle asks us, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 holding you back from making that quantum leap?鈥欌

鈥淲e鈥檙e all taking a step back from our day-to-day challenges and thinking more about the long term.鈥

This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 麻豆精品. Learn more here.

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