Leadership magazine Jan/Feb 2016 V45 No 3 | Page 30

Building Leadership Capacity Through Student Charters: A Reflection As educational administration students become increasingly involved in ACSA through student charters, their ability to best make a difference in student lives is positively affected. 30 Leadership ACSA’s Region 9 Student Charter has been helping to build strong leaders for more than 15 years, and my personal experience with this phenomenal organization represents just one example of how many educational leaders have benefitted from its existence. During the time I was working on a master’s in educational leadership and administration from California State University, Fresno, professor Don Wise encouraged me to attend a Student Charter board meeting to learn more about ACSA. I had never heard of ACSA. To me, this was simply one more acronym to add to my professional education vocabulary. I could never have anticipated that attending this first meeting would begin a professional journey leading to learning experiences and career opportunities that would both reignite my passion for educational leadership and also allow me to build my capacity for making a difference in the lives of students. Region 9’s Student Charter partners with area universities and Phi Delta Kappa. Student Charter advisors Don Wise, along with Michele Pecina and Vicki Pontius from National University, Matt Gehrett from Fresno Pacific University, and Al Owen from Phi Delta Kappa, actively recruit educational administration students to join ACSA. It is this connection that led others and myself to involvement in the charter that is committed to providing professional learning, networking, and scholarship opportunities for its members. ACSA’s Region 9 Student Charter inspires and builds the capacity of leaders from the Central California counties of Mariposa, Merced, Madera and Fresno. At the first Region 9 Student Charter By Katherine Goyette