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ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ has provided a professional home for me throughout my career. As a middle school teacher, I first sought ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ for professional development as I transitioned from college to becoming a new English language arts teacher. I eventually began to see ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ as my place for a plethora of resources and an actual, thriving, learning community. After 20+ years of active learning with ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ, I continue to call ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ my professional home, as it continues to provide space for dialogue, relationship-building, and both professional and personal growth for me as a lifelong learner at every stage of my career. I look forward to serving my ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ family as one of its leaders and being an advocate for our community. I am honored to be selected as Vice President and seek collaboration and dialogue to move us forward. We are stronger together, more so than any one person could be alone. Our collective voices make a difference, an impact.

Tonya B. Perry is a tireless advocate for students and educators who are often denied a voice. She works with and for educators, students, and communities to develop programs and initiatives that uplift historically marginalized peoples. In addition, she has advocated for others on numerous committees, including the ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ Executive Committee, as a ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ Research Foundation Trustee, ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ Inclusivity Task Force, ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµAR chairperson, and ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµ Editorial Board. She currently is the director for ÀóÖ¦ÊÓÆµâ€™s Cultivating New Voices among Scholars of Color program and serves on the National Writing Project’s Board of Directors. Perry has also served the nation as a 2000 National Teacher of the Year finalist and a two-time National Board Certified Teacher (NBCT). She has worked as a middle school teacher, teacher educator, full professor, executive director and principal investigator for a large GEAR UP grant, director of the Red Mountain Writing Project, and both interim department chair and executive director for outreach and engagement for a School of Education. Her new co-authored book Teaching for Racial Equity; Creating Interrupters (Stenhouse), which was released in April 2022, is a collaborative work with two teacher educators, Steve Zemelman and Katy Smith, and other brilliant teacher-writers