
PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
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Make a significant and visible societal impact


local educators and College of Education faculty, staff and students that provided 2028 Strategic Vision input
EDUC 201 undergraduate students matched with more than 20 local school & community partners

preK-12 students reached by the 2024 Youth Literature Festival
Illinois families served each day through our early intervention initiatives

CREA
Leadership, Legacy and Looking Forward
The Center for Culturally Responsive Evaluation and Assessment (CREA) is an interdisciplinary, international community dedicated to advancing research, evaluation, and assessment that foregrounds culture and context. CREA brings together scholars, practitioners, and policymakers to build capacity in designing, implementing, and evaluating social and educational interventions and programs.
BY ASHLEY LAWRENCE





Images from the CREA VIII Conference, April 2025.
Top Left: Cherie Avent (left), faculty member and CREA affiliate, with Tamara Bertrand Jones (right).
Top Right: Denice Hood at the podium.
Bottom Left: Hazel Symonette, CREA Emerita Affiliate.

Bertrand Jones

Hood
“
I want CREA to be the premier place for advancing cultural responsiveness. When we think about cultural responsiveness—whether it be in evaluation, assessment, even research—when people need resources and support, I want them to find CREA.”
– Bertrand Jones
Tamara Bertrand Jones can pinpoint exactly what—or whom—inspired her doctoral work two decades ago in evaluation and assessment. It’s also what now motivates her as the new director of the Center for Culturally Responsive Evaluation and Assessment.
“One of my first pivotal exposures to the lack of representation, the lack of Black theorists appearing in our ‘evaluation canon’ of experts who pioneered assessment frameworks, was a piece by Stafford Hood called Nobody Knows My Name,” says Bertrand Jones. “His work was the first time that I had read about historical Black impact on the field of evaluation, and I said, ‘Yes! This is what I want to learn about! This is what I want to contribute to during my career.’”
Bertrand Jones, who is also associate dean for faculty affairs in the College of Education, was appointed CREA Director in August 2025.
But back in 2002—when terminology like “cultural competency” and “multicultural validity” were still widely used—Bertrand Jones attended her first American Evaluation Association conference as a doctoral student. And there, she met Stafford Hood in person.
“He was immediately welcoming and set out introducing me to his network of colleagues doing culturally responsive work,” says Bertrand Jones. “I had been reading Dr. Hood’s work and other work and was excited to meet him. Several years later, he invited me to be part of the first group of affiliates involved with CREA.”
Legacy Firmly in Place
Bertrand Jones takes on leadership of CREA from Denice Ward Hood, teaching professor emerita in Education Policy, Organization and Leadership. Hood, a distinguished scholar in her own right and part of Stafford’s culturally responsive evaluation work since their time at Arizona State University, stepped up and led CREA after her husband’s unexpected death in 2023.
The culmination of Stafford’s lifelong work, in 2011 he formally established CREA as a center after returning to the Illinois faculty. In 2023, CREA was designated a permanent Center of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Hood says it remains the ideal place for CREA to call home.
“Some of the greatest contributions to the field of assessment and evaluation have emerged from the College of Education at Illinois,” says Hood. “CREA is unique in that its history is embedded in the College, a national leader in the academic area of evaluation and assessment. I believe it’s critical that the Center stay connected to faculty who are continuing to grow the scholarship of theory and evaluation.”
For her part, Bertrand Jones never anticipated coming to Illinois, but is honored with the opportunity to lead.
“When I became faculty at Florida State University, I continued my involvement with CREA as an affiliate,” she says. “It has shaped my approach to being director, given my knowledge of the Center’s history, of what Stafford intended CREA to be, and what CREA has come to mean to its community.
“Being named director is very meaningful for me because of that legacy that I’ve been a part of, but also, get to be a part of shaping and continuing for Stafford,” says Bertrand Jones.
More Than a Conference
“Everybody knows that CREA does the conference, so people go ‘oh CREA, it’s a conference!’ Yes. And much more than a conference,” says Bertrand Jones.
Hood describes the conference as “just big enough to have a wide perspective of views and a vibrant intellectual community, but small enough for people to get to know each other and bond.” She calls it a safe place for scholars and practitioners to get constructive feedback, be mentored and nurtured. “It gives people the energy to do the work,” she says.
Work that’s become increasingly difficult, says Bertrand Jones.
Guide Helps Undocumented People Navigate Deportation
The Education Justice Project produces a biannual resource that offers practical guidance and information to help people navigate the process.
BY TOM HANLON

Erick Nava and Lee Ragsdale
“
It’s an incredibly comprehensive and powerful guide that is very much in demand now because of the current climate. We see it as this potentially traumatic transition that an individual can be empowered to navigate more successfully.”
– Ragsdale
Lee Ragsdale knows the plight of people who are detained and deported well. Her husband, Erick Nava, came to the U.S. with his family when he was four months old. As a teenager living in a Latino neighborhood in Chicago, Nava was arrested, charged, and spent 15 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. Once released, he was shuttled around to detention facilities in four states for three weeks, never knowing where he was going or for how long he would be there.
Finally arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border, Nava and the others were dropped off.
“They just opened the gate and said, ‘There’s Mexico, good luck,’” says Ragsdale.
Ragsdale, reentry resource program director, began working for the Education Justice Project in 2010. It was her idea to create A New Path: A Guide to the Challenges and Opportunities After Deportation which was first published in 2018.
A New Path is a 172-page resource that helps readers fight deportation or get ready for deportation or return to their home country. It informs them how to get their basic needs met in their country of origin, including how to find jobs and schools. It includes a section on healing, moving forward, and building healthy relationships and offers resources for returning to Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. It offers an array of valuable resources and forms for use in the U.S. and other countries.
“We produce this guide because we are realists committed to human dignity,” says EJP Director Rebecca Ginsburg. “We aspire to a world in which people impacted by incarceration can lead full, meaningful, liberated lives.”
EJP offers college coursework inside prisons and engages in public policy to expand access to higher education for incarcerated individuals across Illinois.
Chad Rand and Celia Beaty unpack copies of A New Path.

copies of A New Path have been distributed since 2024
Strengthening Ties With Our Local Educator Community

Marlee Bunch
local educators participated in the 2025 TEACH Academy at the University of Illinois
It was another year of growth for the TEACH Academy, organized by the College’s Center for Education in Small Urban Communities (CESUC). With its third annual conference complete, the Transforming Education for Action, Collaboration and Hope (TEACH) Academy has been bridging the gap between university researchers in education and local practitioners.
“This is an outreach effort that helps bond the University of Illinois to the local community,” says Victor Perez, the director of CESUC. “There is a strong desire for teachers to access a space where they can reimagine their professional practice and build on their strengths. The TEACH Academy offers a place for educators to grow.”
College of Education alumna Marlee Bunch, Ed.D. ’23 EPOL, an interdisciplinary educator, scholar, and author, delivered a keynote talk and led breakout sessions during this year’s conference. Bunch uses writing and history to encourage dialogue and self-reflection in her work with students and educators. Margarita Machado Casas, a professor in Dual language and English Learner Education at San Diego State University delivered a second keynote address. Attendees discussed topics like building thinking classrooms, co-teaching, and trauma-informed practices during sessions.
“The academy is a high-quality professional experience designed to empower local educators,” says Perez. “We are building a community of educators that actively engage in reflective practices grounded in research.”





Youth Literature Festival Celebrates Reading and Multicultural Stories
For the first time since 2019, the Youth Literature Festival returned to the University of Illinois campus and neighboring communities. The festival welcomed 15 authors who visited over 40 classrooms to share their books, engage with students, and promote a love of reading.
Headlining this year’s festival included award-winning authors Tameka Fryer Brown, Justin A. Reynolds, and Greg Neri.
“Research shows a strong correlation between high literacy levels and educational and career success later in life,” says Mackenzie Gillespie, Youth Literature Festival coordinator. “And creating excitement about reading at a young age is key to proficiency. The festival’s author lineup and Community Day Celebration are geared to help kids experience the joy and discovery found in books.”
The festival’s community day welcomed hundreds of children and their families to the Campus Instructional Facility, Illinois, for a day full of author talks, crafts, activities, cultural performances, and more. The next festival is scheduled for Fall 2026.
Images from the Youth Literature Festival Community Event, top to bottom: Author Justin A. Reynolds with a Miles Morales fan; children taking part in art activities; author Anne Lapera signing books; the Youth Literature Festival Planning Committee.

Josh Katz (center) and colleagues.
Global Pedagogy, Local Impact, and Those Who Teach
Josh Katz, Ph.D. student in Curriculum & Instruction, was awarded the Best Student Paper Award at the annual conference of the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE). His award-winning paper explores how global teaching experiences shape instructional practices among engineering faculty and what that means for the future of engineering education.
“As demand for global learning opportunities increases, it is crucial to understand how instructors engage with these models and how their teaching practices evolve as a result,” Katz says. “By analyzing survey data from instructors who have led these programs, we can refine and iterate program design and collaborations with international partners to better support future instructors’ implementation efforts for their students.”
“Josh’s work represents a full-circle approach to educational innovation,” says Molly Goldstein, teaching associate professor, The Grainger College of Engineering, C&I. “He’s identifying what works through research and then turning around and making those insights actionable for today’s educators.”

Altshuler

Hale

Marchand

Wilson
Preventing Harassment and Discrimination in Schools
Four Education faculty members were key in developing a new training for Illinois teachers. Mari Altshuler, teaching assistant professor in Curriculum & Instruction, Jon Hale, Education Policy & Organizational Leadership and C&I professor, Aixa Marchand, assistant professor in Educational Psychology, and Asif Wilson, assistant professor in C&I, worked with the Illinois Department of Human Rights to create the training in connection with the Illinois Racism-Free Schools Law. The law requires every school in Illinois to adopt a written anti-discrimination policy, train employees on how to recognize and report discrimination, and inform students and families of their rights and reporting options.

Thomas
Big Ten Early Learning Alliance Shines a Light on Data Solutions
“Isn’t it kind of crazy that we are still asking the same questions that we asked 15 years ago?” marvels Dawn Thomas, who leads the Illinois Early Childhood Asset Map (IECAM), an ever-expanding demographic and service-related data resource for policymakers. Thomas focuses on how communities, districts and the state can improve early care and education services through better data and IECAM is part of that effort. A new coalition of early childhood research experts, the Big Ten Early Learning Alliance including those from IECAM and the Discovery Partners Institute’s Illinois Workforce and Education Research Collaborative, are working to disseminate solutions to the field—starting with a focus on data. Thomas sees promise in the “open dialogue going on between advocates, researchers, and other stakeholders who are invested in knowing more about young children and about the early childhood landscape.” Ultimately, this work will lead to what she envisions as “a public portal that will be used for a lot of our integrated data.”

CENTERS & STRATEGIC INITIATIVES
Center for Culturally Responsive Evaluation & Assessment (CREA) brings scholars and practitioners together around issues of cultural context in evaluation and assessment.
Center for Education in Small Urban Communities (CESUC) serves as the liaison for school-university partnerships.
Center for Research and Innovation in Technology-Enhanced Learning (ITEL) is a campus hub for designing and investigating the impact of new technologies on learning.
The Early Childhood Collective provides research and resources for educating and raising young children.
Education Justice Project (EJP) expands higher education within American prison populations.
Forum on the Future of Public Education disseminates credible information on key questions facing P-20 education.
Illinois New Teacher Collaborative (INTC) provides statewide leadership for promoting new teacher induction and mentoring programs.
INVITE Institute, funded by the National Science Foundation, seeks to establish AI techniques with empirical evidence for supporting noncognitive skill development in STEM learning contexts.
Office of Community College Research & Leadership (OCCRL) studies policies, programs, and practices designed to enhance outcomes for diverse youths and adults who seek to transition to and through college to employment.
Office for Mathematics, Science & Technology Education enhances student achievement and teaching performance in math, science, and technology.
University Primary School is a pre-K through fifth-grade Reggio Emilia-inspired lab school.

2025 PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT FELLOWS
Three faculty members will represent the College of Education as Public Engagement Faculty Fellows this academic year, partnering with local and statewide communities to improve understanding and practices in education. Now in its fourth year, this program enhances the ongoing community engagement efforts of the College.

Elizabeth Dyer
Assistant Professor, Curriculum & Instruction
Dyer’s project involves working with NIA Incorporated, a community organization in Rantoul that aims to support families and youth through programming that promotes education, skill development, and personal growth.

Chang-kyu Kwon
Assistant Professor, Education Policy, Organization & Leadership
Kwon is partnering with the Illinois Division of Rehabilitation Services to develop, implement and evaluate the impact of an educational workshop focused on disability employment, targeting small- and medium-sized manufacturing employers in Illinois.

Kary Zarate
Teaching Assistant Professor, Special Education
Zarate is developing an online training course for para-professionals to onboard them to their new roles. The course will be created in collaboration with local paraprofessionals to enhance the knowledge and skills of newly hired paraprofessionals in their districts.