Dr. Boni Wozolek is currently the Director of Inclusive Excellence and an Associate Professor of Education at Penn State University, Abington College. Her work examines race, sexual orientations, and gender identities through qualitative research methods and teaching practices across educational contexts. Dr. Wozolek’s recent publications include two monographs, Assemblages of Violence in Education: Everyday Trajectories of Oppression (Routledge, 2021) and Educational Necropolitics: A Sonic Ethnography of Everyday Racisms in US Schools (Routledge, 2023), and two edited volumes, Black Lives Matter in US Schools: Race, Education, and Resistance (SUNY, 2022) and Queer Battle Fatigue: Education, Exhaustion, and Everyday Oppressions (Routledge, 2023). Dr. Wozolek has received multiple awards for her scholarship, including two book awards (AESA and AERA), a best article of the year award (Educational Studies), and early career award (AERA) and local awards that recognize her commitment to communities and activist work that foregrounds equity, access, and inclusion.
Walter S. Gershon (Ph.D.) is Associate Professor of Critical Foundations of Education at Rowan University (New Jersey, United States). Dr. Gershon’s scholarly interests focus on a) questions of justice, dignity, and access about how people make sense, b) the sociocultural processes that inform their sensibilities, and c) the qualitative methods used to study educational ecologies. Walter’s work uses critical understandings in sound and the senses to consider everyday experiences of race, class, gender, and sexualities with disenfranchised city children and youth. In addition to traditional pathways for scholarship and more publicly oriented soundworks, Dr. Gershon’s awards include national recognition for single-authored books Sound Curriculum: Educational Sonic Studies in Theory, Method, and Practice (Routledge) and Curriculum and Students in Classrooms: Everyday Urban Education in an Era of Standardization (Lexington Books). Forthcoming work includes an additional two monographs, one on sonic qualitative methodologies (Routledge) and another that uses a genre-defying combination of sound and text that documents everyday urban education with responding images from Jorge Lucero (MIT Press).
Dr. Roland Mitchell is the E.B. “Ted” Robert Endowed Professor and Dean of the College of Human Sciences and Education at Louisiana State University. His research interests include theorizing the impact of historical and communal knowledge on pedagogy. Roland has authored seven coedited books and numerous other scholarly works that have appeared in leading scholarly journals. He is Co-Editor of the Lexington Press of Rowman and Littlefield book series Race and Education in the 21st Century and Higher Education section editor of the Journal of Curriculum Theorizing. Roland has a deep passion for impactful community service as evidenced through his membership on the advisory boards of the Louisiana Department of Children and Family Services, Campus Federal Credit Union, and the Louisiana Governor’s Taskforce on Community Policing and Reform. He has a B.A. in History from Fisk University, a M.Ed. in Higher Education from Vanderbilt University, and a Ph.D. in Educational Research from The University of Alabama.