Summit Committees
The Environmental and Climate Change Literacy Project and Summit Steering Committee included key stakeholders who contributed to recommendations regarding UC and CSU commitments in the ECCLPS Report and summit at UCLA in 2019.
Summit Steering Committee Co-chairs
Marquita Grenot-Scheyer
Ram Ramanathan
Fred Uy
Marcelo Suárez-Orozco
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Assistant Vice Chancellor, Educator Preparation and Public Schools Programs, CSU Chancellor's Office
Dr. Marquita Grenot-Scheyer serves as Assistant Vice Chancellor of Educator Preparation and Public School Programs, for the California State University (CSU), Office of the Chancellor. She is responsible for leading, coordinating, and facilitating system-wide efforts to recruit, prepare, and retain teachers, counselors, and school leaders for schools and communities. She represents CSU at the state and federal levels, providing policy and practice recommendations to ensure high-quality educator preparation programs. Prior to this appointment, she served as Dean of the College of Education at CSU Long Beach. Dr. Grenot-Scheyer serves on the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing board, the WestEd board, and was recently appointed to the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education board of directors. She was a member of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities Teacher Education Task Force on Teacher Preparation in 2016, which produced the report Preparing Teachers in Today’s Challenging Context. She previously served two terms as a board member of the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation from 2013 to 2017, and served as a commissioner on the Commission on Standards and Performance Reporting from May, 2012 to June, 2013.
She earned her Ph.D. in Special Education from the joint doctoral program at the University of California, Los Angeles and California State University, Los Angeles. In recognition of her career accomplishments, she was selected as Distinguished Alumna, California State University, Los Angeles Charter College of Education, in 2008.
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Distinguished Professor of Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego
Dr. Veerabhadran Ramanathan (Dr. Ram) is a Distinguished Professor of Atmospheric and Climate Sciences at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego. Dr. Ram discovered the greenhouse effect of cholorofluorocarbons (CFCs) in 1975 that established non-CO2 gases as a major contributor to global warming and enabled the Montreal protocol to become the first successful climate mitigation policy. For this work, he was awarded the Tyler Prize in 2009. In 1980, he was one of the first to statistically predict that global warming would be detected above the background noise by 2000—later verified by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 2001. He led a NASA study with its climate satellite to show that clouds had a net cooling effect on the planet and quantified the radiation interactions with water vapor and its amplification of CO2 warming. Dr. Ram led international field campaigns and developed unmanned aircraft platforms for tracking brown clouds pollution worldwide. His work has led to numerous policies including the formation of UN’s Climate and Clean Air Coalition.
Dr. Ram founded and designed Project Surya with Nithya Ramanathan and Tara Ramanathan, an extended effort to characterize and mitigate climate and health impacts of cooking with solid biomass and to protect the poorest three billion from climate change. He is now leading a University of California climate solutions effort which launched a course on interdisciplinary climate solutions, Bending the Curve.
He was honored as His Holiness Pope Francis’s Science Advisor to the historic 2015 Paris Climate Summit and also served as an advisor to former California Governor Jerry Brown. He was named the United Nations Climate Champion in 2013, and elected to the United States National Academy and the Royal Swedish Academy. In 2014, Foreign Policy named him a thought leader, and in 2018 he was named the Tang Laureate for sustainability science.
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Wasserman Dean & Distinguished Professor of Education, Graduate School of Education & Information Studies, UCLA
Dr. Marcelo Suárez-Orozco, the inaugural UCLA Wasserman Dean, leads two academic departments, 16 nationally renowned research institutes, and two innovative demonstration schools at UCLA’s Graduate School of Education & Information Studies. His research focuses on cultural psychology and psychological anthropology, with an emphasis on migration, globalization, and education. His award-winning books have been published by Harvard University Press, Stanford University Press, University of California Press, Cambridge University Press, New York University Press, and others. His scholarly papers, in a range of disciplines and languages, appear in leading journals including Harvard Educational Review, Harvard Business Review, Revue Française de Pédagogie, Cultuur en Migratie, Temas: Cultura, Ideologia y Sociedad, Ethos, The Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Harvard Policy Review, and other journals. He regularly contributes to national and international media outlets including The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, U.S News and World Report, the Huffington Post, CNN, NPR, CNN Español, MSNBC and others.
Dean Suárez-Orozco serves as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (Governance and Trust Board) and the National Academy of Education, a trustee of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and is the recipient of the Mexican Order of the Aztec Eagle. He has served as Special Advisor to the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands. At Harvard, he served as the Victor S. Thomas Professor of Education and Culture, Co-founder and Co-director of the Harvard Immigration Projects, and founding member of the Executive Committee of the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies. At New York University, he served as the inaugural Courtney Sale Ross University Professor of Globalization and Education. Dean Suárez-Orozco has held fellowships at Stanford's Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study. He has been Visiting Professor at École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS, Paris), University of Barcelona, and Catholic University of Leuven, and has lectured at the German, Mexican, and Spanish Foreign Offices, the Vatican, United States Congress, the United Nations, Davos, and other venues.
In January of 2018, His Holiness Pope Francis appointed Dean Suárez-Orozco to the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, and on July 4, 2018, the Carnegie Corporation of New York named him a “Great Immigrant”. An immigrant from Argentina, Dean Suárez-Orozco is a product of the California Master Plan, having studied in a community college and at the University of California, Berkeley, where he received his Ph.D. in Anthropology in 1986.
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Director, Educator Preparation and Public School Programs and Co-Director, Center for the Advancement of Instruction in Quantitative Reasoning, CSU Chancellor's Office
Dr. Fred Uy serves both as a director of the Department of Educator Preparation and Public School Programs and Co-Director for the Center for the Advancement of Instruction in Quantitative Reasoning at the Office of the Chancellor, California State University (CSU). Before joining the Office of the Chancellor, Dr. Uy was a Professor of Mathematics Education at California State University, Los Angeles, and a K–12 mathematics teacher. As director, Dr.Uy is responsible for overseeing and increasing the capacity of the department to provide leadership and support to the educator preparation programs on campuses across the CSU system. He has contributed to CSU initiatives in secondary school teacher mathematics preparation as a trainer for the Early Assessment Program in Mathematics and as a leader of the CSU Math Teacher Education Partnership. Dr. Uy also has served as a mathematics consultant for school districts and publishers and has conducted numerous professional development trainings in the following areas: mathematics pedagogy, teaching mathematics to English language learners, assessments, linked learning, arts integration, and bilingual education.
Summit Subcommittee Co-chairs
Pre-service Subcommittee Co-chairs
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Dean, Charter College of Education, Cal State LA
Cheryl L. Ney is the Dean of the Charter College of Education at the California State University, Los Angeles. Trained as a DNA biochemist, she taught undergraduates for twenty years preparing them as STEM professionals. She is active statewide and on the Governance Committee for the LA Regional Consortium for Linked Learning. She promotes youth tours of campus Hydrogen Research and Refueling facility for them to learn about FCEV automobiles.
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Dean and Professor, School of Education, UCI
Richard Arum is Dean of the School of Education at the UCI. He has served as senior fellow at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and as director of the Education Research Program at the Social Science Research Council. He has a MEd from Harvard University, and a PhD in Sociology from UC Berkeley.
In-service Subcommittee Co-chairs
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Executive Director, California Global Education Project
Emily M. Schell, Ed.D., is Executive Director of the California Global Education Project. She is a former teacher, principal, and district Social Studies Resource teacher for San Diego Unified, K–12 History–Social Science Coordinator for San Diego County Office of Education, preservice instructor for San Diego State University Teacher Education, and liaison for National Geographic Education Foundation.
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Regional Director for K–12 Alliance, WestEd
Jill Grace is a Regional Director for WestEd's K–12 Alliance and past president of the California Science Teachers Association. Her work includes the California NGSS K–8 Early Implementation Initiative, CANGSS Collaborative leadership committee, California Environmental Literacy Initiative, and In-Service Subcommittee of the Environmental and Climate Change Literacy Project and Summit.
Curriculum Subcommittee Co-chairs
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Director of the Educator Excellence and Equity Division, California Department of Education
Barbara Murchison is the Director of the Educator Excellence and Equity Division at the California Department of Education. In this role, she leads a team that supports high quality professional learning for educators to ensure that every student has every opportunity to be successful in school and in life.
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Chief Executive Officer, Ten Strands
Karen Cowe is the CEO of Ten Strands, a California-based nonprofit whose mission is to build and strengthen the partnerships and strategies that will bring environmental literacy to all of California’s 6.2 million K–12 students. She is the project director of the California Environmental Literacy Initiative, a statewide public-private partnership focused on implementing California’s Blueprint for Environmental Literacy.
Summit Steering Committee Members
Richard Arum, Dean and Professor, School of Education, UCI
Susan Belgrad, Professor, Elementary Education and Faculty Fellow, Institute for Sustainability, CSUN
Kahri Boykin, Green Technology and Energy Conservation Teacher, Yosemite High School, Merced Union High School District
Karen Cowe, Chief Executive Officer, Ten Strands
Amy Frame, K–12 Program Manager, Ten Strands
Cyane Dandridge, Executive Director, SEI
Jose Flores, Civic and Environmental Advisor, Comite Civico del Valle
Jill Grace, Regional Director, K–12 Alliance, WestEd and Past President, California Science Teachers Association
Julie Henderson, Deputy Secretary for Health and Public Policy, CalEPA
Peter Kareiva, Director, Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, UCLA
Barbara Murchison, Educator Excellence and Equity Division Director, California Department of Education
Cheryl Ney, Dean, Charter College of Education, Cal State LA
Thomas Philip, Associate Professor and Director, Teacher Education, UC Berkeley
Leslie Ponciano, Director, Research Opportunities, CSU Chancellor's Office
Christy Porter, Senior Environmental Scientist, Office of Education and the Environment, CalRecycle
Jody Priselac, Associate Dean, Community Programs, UCLA
Nan Renner, Senior Director of Learning Design and Innovation, Birch Aquarium at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD
Emily Schell, Executive Director, California Global Education Project, San Diego State University
Samuel Shen, Professor, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, San Diego State University
Maria Simani, Executive Director, California Science Project, UC Riverside
Ilene Straus, Vice President, California State Board of Education
Leslie Tamminen, Director, Ocean Program, Seventh Generation Advisors
Kimberly Waite, Teacher Leader, California Global Education Project
Jeffrey White, Professor, Biological Sciences, Humboldt State University
Additional Key Summit Members
Leigh Leveen
Claudia L. Martinez
Jody Z. Priselac
Matt St. Clair
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Director Communications, UCLA Graduate School of Education & Information Studies and Editor, UCLA ED&IS Magazine
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Executive Director, Educator Programs, Office of Diversity and Engagement, UC Office of the President
Claudia L. Martinez is the Executive Director for Educator Programs in the Office of Diversity and Engagement at the University of California, Office of the President (UCOP) where she provides systemwide support and guidance for UC’s educator preparation and professional development programs, including the statewide California Subject Matter Project. She was recently appointed to the Scientific and Pedagogical Committee for the Office of Climate Education (OCE), an international initiative for climate change education. She is currently the University of California’s liaison to the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities (HACU) that advocates for Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) across the nation and is a co-chair of UC’s President’s Chicano/Latino Advisory Council.
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Associate Dean, Community Programs, Graduate School of Education & Information Studies, UC Los Angeles
Jody Z. Priselac is the Associate Dean for Community Programs at the Graduate School of Education & Information Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Dr. Priselac has over 30 years experience as a mathematics educator, serving in many roles, including high school teacher, professional development leader, teacher educator, and educational researcher. Her research interests focus on understanding how to bring about change in teacher practice in teaching mathematics in urban schools and in partnering with communities to advance equitable education.
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Director, Sustainability, UC Office of the President
Matthew St.Clair is the first Director of Sustainability for the University of California’s Office of the President, leading sustainability efforts across the 10-campus UC system since 2004. Mr. St.Clair was a founding member of the Board of Directors for the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE). He is also a member of the Board of Directors of Strategic Energy Innovations (SEI), a non-profit organization implementing energy conservation and sustainability education programs in California. Mr. St.Clair has delivered lectures at numerous universities, been an invited keynote speaker at several regional and national conferences, and has advised the U.S. House of Representatives on the formation of an Office of Sustainability for the U.S. Capitol. Mr. St.Clair has a Masters degree in environmental policy from the Energy and Resources Group at UC Berkeley and a Bachelor's degree in Economics from Swarthmore College. He is a LEED Accredited Professional and a Certified Energy Manager.