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Showing posts with label TCEP Brown Bag. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TCEP Brown Bag. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2021

TCEP Brown Bag: 87th Texas Legislature--Lawmaking in a Non-traditional Redistricting Session, featuring Ramiro Canales, Jan. 29, 2021 at Noon

Dear Students, Friends and Colleagues:

On behalf of the Texas Center for Education Policy, I am happy to invite you to a presentation by the legendary Ramiro Canales who will provide an overview of Texas policymaking in a simultaneous redistricting and COVID context. Please read his bio below, bring your lunch and partake of Mr. Canales' flare for the excitement that he brings to every legislative session, especially one's involving redistricting.


Time: Friday, January 25, 2021, at 12:00 pm CT 


You can view this event here.

-Angela Valenzuela, PH.D., Director

Texas Center for Education Policy




RAMIRO CANALES BIOGRAPHY

___________

     Ramiro Canales is a former migrant farmworker from Santa Rosa, Texas in the Lower Rio Grande Valley. After graduating as salutatorian of his class from Santa Rosa High School in 1987, he earned a Bachelor of Arts in International Studies degree from Southwestern University, Texas' first university, in 1991.  In 1994, he earned a Master of Public Affairs degree from the LBJ School of Public Affairs at UT-Austin.  In 1998, he earned his law degree from The University of Texas School of Law.

     Mr. Canales began volunteering at the Texas Capitol in 1989 as a legislative intern for the late State Representative Irma Rangel, the author of the “Top Ten Percent” law, and became her chief of staff in 1995. He has served as a staff attorney for the Texas Association of Community Health Centers; as the assistant executive director for governmental relations at the Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA); as an assistant attorney general for Texas Attorneys General John Cornyn and Greg Abbott; and as a lecturer on the Texas legislative process at The University of Texas at Austin.  

     Mr. Canales is an experienced litigator, appellate lawyer, and a “public policy engineer” a/k/a/ lobbyist.  He is the founder of the Legislative Boot Camp®, an intensive one-day training program on how things really work at the Texas Legislature.  

     His proudest achievement is earning his bachelor's, master's, and doctorate degrees without owning a car.

      ***

  

Sunday, April 01, 2018

TCEP Brown Bag—PAR Entremundos/Between Worlds: A Pedagogy of Las Américas, by Dr. Julio Cammarota

TCEP Brown Bag
Thursday, April 5, 2018 
12-1:00PM
SZB 360A
University of Texas at Austin


Happening this Thursday.  Please bring your lunch and let's listen to Iowa State University Profesor Dr. Julio Cammarota speak on his co-edited book titled, PAR Entremundos/Between Worlds: A Pedagogy of Las Américas, with fellow co-editors Melissa Rivera,‎ Jennifer Ayala, Margarita I. Berta-Avila,‎ María Elena Torre,‎ and Louie F. Rodríguez.

He will speak on the Participatory Action Research (PAR) framework that he and his colleagues developed out of the their respective PAR projects that culminates in this volume.

Dr. Cammarota is returning to the University of Arizona in the fall after a relatively brief hiatus in Iowa.  I'm sure Arizona is happy to have him back. And we're happy to have him with us, too!

Open to the public. 

 -Angela Valenzuela


Wednesday, April 12, 2017

April 20, 2017 TCEP Brown Bag—Brown Lives Matter: Educational Equity, Tucson Unified, and the National Movement for Ethnic Studies

Free and open to the public

What: TCEP Brown Bag lecture, featuring University of Arizona Tucson Professor Nolan Cabrera His talk is titled,

"Brown Lives Matter: Educational Equity, Tucson Unified, and  the National Movement for Ethnic Studies" 

When: Thursday, April 20, 2017, 12-1:30PM
Where: Chicano Culture Room, Texas Union (UNB 4.206)


Light refreshments will be served. 

I also encourage you to read Dr. Cabrera's pertinent publication based on his path breaking research in Ethnic Studies at TUSD titled, Missing the (Student Achievement) Forest for all the (Political) Trees: Empiricism and the Mexican American Studies Controversy in Tucson, published in the top education journal in the field, namely, American Education Research Journal.

Angela Valenzuela