UCEA Annual Convention 
2024
WHERE:
Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites
Los Angeles
WHEN:
Nov 20-23, 2024
WHO:
UCEA Community
 
 
Convention Theme
Renewing Our Engagement: Leading Schools and Communities with Justice and Joy
The 38th annual UCEA Convention will be held November 20–23, 2024 at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites in Los Angeles, California. The purpose of the 2024 UCEA Convention is to engage participants in discussions about research, policy, practice, and preparation in the field of education with a focus on the need for and promise of leading schools and communities with justice and joy. The 2024 Convention Planning Committee includes Karen Stansberry Beard (Ohio State University), Rebecca Cheung (University of California, Berkeley), Matthew Militello (East Carolina University), Nathaniel Stewart (University of Minnesota Twin Cities), and Karl Gildner (UCEA Events Manager).
REGISTRATION
Hotel

Westin Bonaventure Hotel and Suites, Los Angeles
Guest Room Rates
- Single/Double: $185.00 + tax
- Rooms available at group rate from November 14 through November 27
The 2024 UCEA Annual Convention host hotel is the Westin Bonaventure Hotel and Suites, Los Angeles. We encourage you to make your reservation early as rooms sell quickly. All reservations must be made by Monday, October 28, 2024, in order to receive rates listed above. 
Reserve your room online or by calling (213) 624-1000. Mention that you are with the UCEA Annual Convention when booking by phone.
Convention Planning Committee
  
  
    
    
      Karen Beard
      Ohio State University
      
     
    
   
  
    
      
         
        Karen Beard
        Ohio State University
        
          Karen Stansberry Beard, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of
          Educational Administration and an Educational Policy affiliate. She
          teaches Positive Psychology in Educational Administration, Ethics, The
          Social and Political Context of Education, and School and Community
          Relations. Karen’s research focuses on educational administration with
          the intentional exploration of positive psychology constructs
          (engagement and well-being) relative to organizational leadership and
          policy implementation supportive of cross-cultural understanding and
          achievement gap reduction. African-American and Latinx student
          achievement and civil rights legislation are central to her interests.
          These foci undergird her publications as well as her presentation
          activities across the United States and internationally. She is one of
          the first scholars to introduce Positive Psychology into the work of
          educational administration and policy implementation and the first
          known scholar to introduce flow theory into the Educational
          Administration literature. For this work, Karen has received multiple
          teaching, research, and service accolades.
        
       
     
   
  
    
    
      Rebecca Cheung
      University of California, Berkeley
      
     
    
   
  
    
      
         
        Rebecca Cheung
        University of California, Berkeley
        
          Rebecca Cheung is the Assistant Dean of Berkeley School of
          Education's Leadership Development programs. She also serves as
          the Principal Investigator and Director for the 21st Century
          School Leadership Academy (21CSLA) State Center. Funded by the
          state, 21CSLA is dedicated to the professional learning and support of
          California’s educational leaders—teacher, site, and district—to create
          more equitable learning environments that ultimately improve success
          for underserved students. Dr. Cheung’s research focuses on issues of
          leadership preparation and development, especially related to
          increasing capacity to lead for equity and social justice that results
          in creating more inclusive and effective schooling.
        
       
     
   
   
  
  
    
    
      Matt Militello
      East Carolina University
      
     
    
   
  
    
      
         
        Matt Militello
        East Carolina University
        
          Dr. Matthew Militello is the Wells Fargo Distinguished Professor
          in Educational Leadership at East Carolina University. He has held
          faculty positions at North Carolina State University (2008- 2014) and
          the University of Massachusetts at Amherst (2005-2008). Prior to his
          academic career, Militello was a middle and high public school
          teacher, assistant principal, and principal in Michigan (1992-2003).
          Militello has more than 60 publications including five books.
          Militello has received funding to conduct research from the College
          Board, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Xian Normal University, and a
          multi-million-dollar Race to the Top grant to train school leaders in
          Northeast North Carolina. Most recently, Militello was the principal
          investigator on a $1 million National Science Foundation grant focused
          on computational thinking in middle school art and music, as well as a
          $6.6 million U.S. Department of Education Supporting Effective
          Educator Development grant focused on a networked improvement
          community of school leaders understanding, observations, and
          conversations with math and science teachers
          (education.ecu.edu/ProjectI4). He is currently a Co-PI on a $9
          million grant (U.S. Department of Education Teacher Quality
          Partnership) focused on fortifying the pipeline of educators in rural
          NE North Carolina. He is the founding director of an innovative Ed.D.
          degree for ECU based in Bangkok, Thailand
          (education.ecu.edu/IntEdD). He earned his undergraduate teaching
          degree from the University of Michigan (1992) and his Master’s (1996)
          and Ph.D. (2004) in Educational Administration from Michigan State
          University. Matt is the father of four boys.
        
       
     
   
  
    
    
      Nathaniel Stewart
      University of Minnesota Twin Cities
      
     
    
   
  
    
      
         
        Nathaniel Stewart
        University of Minnesota Twin Cities
        
          Nathaniel (Nate) D. Stewart is a former middle school science teacher,
          Black liberatory pedagogist, and assistant professor of
          education, policy, and leadership. His knowledge-creation
          activities explore Black, justice-oriented, and K-12
          educators’ unique roles as policy activists and Black student
          agency shepherds. His inquiry is guided by critical quantification,
          anti-colonial epistemologies, and Black Critical Theory, purposed
          to bolster the political and pedagogical activities of Black
          educators, school leaders, and their allies.
        
       
     
   
 
 
Call for Proposals
Go to the call for proposals page Here.
All Academic is closed for proposal submissions for the UCEA Annual Convention.
Proposal Reviews
Thank you for everyone that submitted a proposal for this year’s Convention. Proposal reviews are available for Proposal Submitters to access and complete.
- Reviews are due before Friday, May 31 at 11:59 PM ET.
- Graduate Students do not review proposals for the Annual Convention. Email us if you are a Graduate Student and received reviews in error.
- Your proposal(s) will be removed from consideration if all reviews are not completed by the deadline.
- Instructions to access All Academic can be found here. 
- Helpful Tips and FAQs for reviewing proposals can be found here.