Leadership magazine May/June 2019 V48 No. 5 | Page 13

table Educational Practices. The Tools form the foundation for assessing equity journeys and implementing an action plan for shifting school district leaders from inequitable prac- tices to equitable practices. In this article we emphasize the tools of Overcoming Barriers, Guiding Principles, and Essential Elements. The individual and institutional barriers that women face can be categorized as: • Being unaware of the school or district’s need to adapt to having women leaders at all levels. • Denying the existence of sexism and gender inequities as systemic oppression. • Denying the existence of systemic privi- lege and entitlement that favors male leaders. • Resisting change that aids in attracting, recruiting, and mentoring women in leader- ship positions. Gathering narrative data We hosted a small Women in Educational Leadership Retreat to help us identify the barriers that hindered, as well as the sup- ports that assisted women leaders on their career journeys. We had hoped to gather 10 to 15 women on a Saturday morning for cof- fee and brunch to respond to our two ques- tions. Much to our surprise and appreciation, almost 30 women joined us. Many of the women told us the invitation and the ques- tions intrigued them because no one had ever asked about barriers or supports to their ca- reer goals. We found these women to be or- dinary, everyday women educational leaders doing their jobs. We had planned an agenda that included an opening strategy called, “Go ‘round”. We would simply “go around” the room and each guest would respond to the following prompts: Who are you? What do you do and where? What inspired/intrigued you to be here today? We had allowed 25 minutes for this strat- egy, including time for the three of us to respond to the prompts. We could not stop the responses. An hour and a half later, each woman had spoken and had told amazing stories about why she was inspired to attend. They told stories of struggles, inspiration, heartbreak, and motivation. The women needed and wanted to tell their stories. And, they wanted to hear each other’s stories. Today’s context and barriers Many of the retreat interviewees’ stories revealed incidents that occurred 20 to 30 years ago; yet, other women told similar experiences occurring within the past 10 years, five years, and even one year ago. As many male leaders contend the glass ceiling had been shattered and the playing field has been leveled, women continue to find the contrary. In addition to the glass ceiling, the retreat participants identified key pipeline barrier themes including marginalization, lack of mentoring and sponsorship, stereo- typing, and discrimination. Cultures of women were well represented in the forum. Women of color and women of the LGBTQ community clearly identified existing barri- ers that the white, heterosexual woman did not encounter nor see. Historical construc- tions of gender and race became evident as women expressed their journeys navigating multiple cultural boundaries in addition to gender barriers. Numerous examples cited by the partici- pants directly aligned to the barriers identi- fied in the Culturally Proficient Framework: May | June 2019 13