By All Means Summer Retreat
JULY 21-22, 2022
As a part of EdRedesign’s annual programming through By All Means (BAM), we are delighted that you will be joining us at the Harvard Graduate School of Education for the BAM Summer Retreat on Thursday, July 21st-Friday, July 22nd. This energizing event will be a chance for us to celebrate our collective efforts over the last year and create opportunities for reconnection and relationship building across BAM communities and with EdRedesign collaborators. We will devote time to unpacking emerging challenges and opportunities for cross-sector work within our field as well as looking ahead to the future of BAM.
Please note that our senior coordinator Raina Hall has recently transitioned from our team. If you have a BAM-related question, please contact our managing director Bridget Rodriguez or our director for partnerships and community impact Rob Watson.

Thursday, July 21st
Location: Gutman Conference Center. Garden Level, Gutman Library 6 Appian Way, Cambridge, MA 02138
9:00-10:00am ET
Registration and Breakfast
10:00-10:30 am ET
Kickoff & Welcome Address
Paul Reville, Francis Keppel Professor of Practice of Educational Policy and Administration & Founding Director of EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Bridget Rodriguez, Managing Director, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Master of Ceremony: Rob Watson, Director for Partnerships and Community Impact, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
10:30-10:45am ET
Break
10:45-12:15pm ET
Highlights from By All Means Communities
BAM Community Leads
12:15-1:00pm ET
Lunch
1:00-1:30pm ET
Lunch Keynote Address
Cornell William Brooks, Hauser Professor of the Practice of Nonprofit Organizations and Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership and Social Justice, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
1:30-1:45pm ET
Break & Group Photo
1:45-2:45pm ET
Lessons from the Field: Moving the Work Forward
Mayor Libby Schaaf, City of Oakland
Melanie Moore, CEO, Oakland Thrives
Karmen Smallwood, Assistant Commissioner for Youth Services, Dutchess County
James Watson, Co-Founder, Poughkeepsie Children's Cabinet
Moderator: Paul Reville, Francis Keppel Professor of Practice of Educational Policy and Administration & Founding Director of EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
2:45-3:00pm ET
Break
3:00-4:00pm ET
Catalytic Strategies for Sustaining Cross-Sector Collaboration
Elizabeth Gaines, CEO, Children's Funding Project
Sagar Desai, Managing Director of Innovation, StriveTogether
Moderator: Rob Watson, Director for Partnerships and Community Impact, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
4:00-4:15pm ET
Break
4:15-5:15pm ET
By All Means Speed Networking
By All Means Executives, Community Leads & Community Representatives
Facilitator: Tauheedah Jackson, Director of the Institute for Success Planning, EdRedesign
5:15-6:00pm ET
Break
6:00-7:30pm ET
By All Means Community Reception
Location: Elliot Lyman Room, 2nd Floor of Longfellow Hall - 13 Appian Way, Cambridge, MA 02138
Friday, July 22nd
9:00-11:00am ET
By All Means Executive Breakfast
Location: Elliot Lyman Room, 2nd Floor of Longfellow Hall - 13 Appian Way, Cambridge, MA 02138
Moderator: Paul Reville, Francis Keppel Professor of Practice of Educational Policy and Administration & Founding Director of EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
For Mayors, Superintendents, and Executives Only*
*This is the closing activity for Executives, although you are welcome to attend afternoon programming.
By All Means Community Leads & Community Representatives
(Location: Gutman Conference Center, Garden Level, Gutman Library - 6 Appian Way, Cambridge, MA 02138)
11:15-12:15pm ET
Community Lead Retreat: Cradle-to-Career Innovations*
Hayling Price, Senior Managing Director of External Engagement, Harlem Children's Zone
Ross Tilchin, Associate Director of Economic Mobility, Results for America
Moderator: Bridget Rodriguez, Managing Director, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
*The programming starting with this event is tailored specifically for BAM community leads and community representatives
12:15-1:15pm ET
Lunch
1:15-2:30pm ET
Community Lead Retreat: Community Reflections and Looking Ahead to 2022-23
By All Means Community leads and community representatives
2:30-2:40pm ET
Community Lead Retreat: Closing Remarks
Paul Reville, Francis Keppel Professor of Practice of Educational Policy and Administration & Founding Director of EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Bridget Rodriguez, Managing Director, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Rob Watson, Director for Partnerships and Community Impact, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Thursday July 21:
Kickoff and Welcome Address

Paul Reville
Francis Keppel Professor of Practice of Educational Policy and Administration & Founding Director of EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Paul Reville is the Francis Keppel Professor of Practice of Educational Policy and Administration at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE). He is the founding director of HGSE's Education Redesign Lab (EdRedesign). In 2013, he completed service as the Secretary of Education for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts under Governor Deval Patrick.
Prior to joining the Patrick Administration, Reville chaired the Massachusetts State Board of Education, founded the Rennie Center for Education Research and Policy, co-founded the Massachusetts Business Alliance for Education (MBAE), chaired the Massachusetts Reform Review Commission, chaired the Massachusetts Commission on Time and Learning, and served as executive director of the Pew Forum on Standards-Based Reform. Reville played a central role in MBAE's development of and advocacy for Massachusetts’ historic Education Reform Act of 1993.
Reville's career, which combines research, policy, and practice, began with service as a VISTA volunteer/youth worker. He served as a teacher and principal of two urban, alternative high schools. Some years later, he founded a local education foundation which was part of the Public Education Network. He is a board member and adviser to a host of governments, school systems and organizations. He has published several books, is a commentator on WGBH’s Boston Public Radio and is a frequent writer and speaker on education reform/redesign, equity and policy. He holds a B.A. from Colorado College, an M.A. from Stanford University and five honorary doctorate degrees.

Bridget Rodriguez
Managing Director, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Bridget has served as the Managing Director of the EdRedesign Lab since its founding in 2014. Prior to EdRedesign, Bridget most recently served as the Director of Planning and Collaboration in the Executive Office of Education (EOE), the Massachusetts Secretary of Education’s office, where she led the Innovation Schools initiative and facilitated the establishment of 54 Innovation Schools across the Commonwealth. She also served as the Secretary’s designee to the Board of Early Education and Care and the Early Literacy Expert Panel. Bridget was formerly the Education Liaison to two mayors of Cambridge. She has also been a school principal and a bilingual teacher. She has served as a consultant for the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, evaluating and providing support to underperforming schools. She received her undergraduate degree from Haverford College and a Master’s in Education Administration from the University of Massachusetts, Boston. Bridget is the parent of two Cambridge Public School students.

Rob Watson
Director for Partnerships and Community Impact, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Rob Watson is the Director for Partnerships and Community Impact at the EdRedesign Lab. His work has focused on themes of civic engagement, community development, and educational equity in the US, Latin America, and Africa. Prior to joining EdRedesign, Rob served as a consultant and advisor to organizations that include the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, Harvard College, Tufts University, The Social Impact Studio, FUSE Corps, The Foundation for Louisiana, The Institute of Politics at Harvard Kennedy School, Harlem Children’s Zone, and The Obama Foundation. A former Peace Corps volunteer, Rob has co-founded five civil society organizations in Paraguay, including Teach for Paraguay, a member of the global Teach for All Network and the Paraguayan Government's first national youth service program. Additionally, he has partnered with the Mayor, Superintendent of Schools, and community stakeholders from his hometown of Poughkeepsie, New York to co-found the Poughkeepsie Children's Cabinet, a collective impact organization that convenes leaders across sectors to develop a citywide cradle-to-career agenda for children, youth, and families. Rob is also a co-founder of Lead for Poughkeepsie, a new AmeriCorps public service fellowship program affiliated with Lead for America, that aims to attract and retain homegrown talent to pursue social impact careers in the Mid-Hudson Valley region of New York State. Rob is a World Economic Forum Global Shaper and former Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Millennium Scholar. He holds a B.A. from Harvard College, an Ed.M in Education Policy and Management from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, and a Mid-Career Master's in Public Administration from Harvard Kennedy School.
Lunch Keynote

Cornell William Brooks
Hauser Professor of the Practice of Nonprofit Organizations and Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership and Social Justice, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
Cornell William Brooks is Hauser Professor of the Practice of Nonprofit Organizations and Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership and Social Justice at Harvard Kennedy School. Brooks leads as Director of The William Monroe Trotter Collaborative for Social Justice at the School’s Center for Public Leadership and serves as Visiting Professor of the Practice of Prophetic Religion and Public Leadership at Harvard Divinity School. Brooks is the former president and CEO of the NAACP, a civil rights attorney, ordained minister, orator, writer, and the executive producer of two films. Under his leadership, the NAACP secured 12 significant legal victories, including laying the groundwork for the first statewide legal challenge to prison-based gerrymandering. He also reinvigorated the activist social justice heritage of the NAACP, dramatically increasing membership. He conceived and led the “America’s Journey for Justice” march from Selma, Alabama to Washington, D.C., over 40 days and 1,000 miles, among many other demonstrations. Prior to leading the NAACP, Brooks was president and CEO of the New Jersey Institute for Social Justice. He previously served as senior counsel and acting director of the Office of Communications Business Opportunities at the Federal Communications Commission, executive director of the Fair Housing Council of Greater Washington, and a trial attorney at both the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and the U.S. Department of Justice. He was the executive producer of the CNN docuseries The People v. the Klan. Brooks holds a J.D. from Yale Law School, where he was a senior editor of the Yale Law Journal and member of the Yale Law & Policy Review, and a Master of Divinity from Boston University’s School of Theology, where he was a Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholar. He also holds a B.A. from Jackson State University. He is a fourth-generation ordained minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Brooks and his family have made Virginia their home for more than 25 years.
Lessons from the Field

Libby Schaaf
Mayor, City of Oakland, CA
Mayor Libby Schaaf was born and raised in Oakland, which she proudly describes as “The most unapologetic Sanctuary City in America.” During her tenure, Oakland has undergone an economic revitalization and building boom, as well as cut gun violence in half. Her “17K/17K Housing Plan” has helped increase Oakland’s affordable housing production, stabilize rents, and decrease evictions. Her innovative public-private partnerships Keep Oakland Housed and Cabin Communities are credited with preventing 1,800 families a year from losing their housing, while resolving some of Oakland’s most unsafe street encampments. In 2019, Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Mayor Schaaf to California’s first Council of Regional Homeless Advisors. She created Oakland’s first Department of Transportation, whose equity-based paving plan is the first of its kind in the nation and will make previously underserved neighborhoods safer, while addressing the city’s decades-old infrastructure backlog. Mayor Schaaf is most proud of launching the Oakland Promise, a bold cradle-to-career initiative to send more low-income Oakland kids to preschool and college. The Oakland Promise has sent more than 1,400 Oakland students (and counting) to college with scholarships and mentors and will give every baby born into poverty a $500 college savings account at birth.

Melanie Moore
Executive Director, Oakland Thrives
Melanie Moore is Chief Executive Officer of Oakland Thrives. An experienced, strategic social sector leader specializing in innovation, collaboration, and collective impact in public-private partnerships, she was a professional evaluator for over 15 years, leading projects assessing the impact of youth development, school reform, community development programs, capacity-building initiatives, and funder networks. As a strategic leader in the social sector for over 10 years, she has created strategies for achieving community and population-level results in governmental, nonprofit, and philanthropic organizations. Dr. Moore was the lead evaluator for the San Francisco Department of Children, Youth, and Families’ first comprehensive outcomes-based evaluation, and also led the Department’s citywide strategic planning efforts for the Mayor’s Children’s Cabinet. Dr. Moore founded See Change, Inc., an evaluation and strategic consulting firm with the goal of improving critical thinking in organizations working to make social change. After eight years leading the company, she joined the Family Independence Initiative as Managing Partner to promote economic and social mobility for families. In this role, she was a founding partner of ALL IN Alameda County, an initiative to bring an innovative approach to the county’s poverty alleviation efforts, and ultimately, she led ALL IN for five years as Director. Most recently, Dr. Moore served two seasons as the Executive Director of the Golden State Warriors Community Foundation. She lives in Oakland with her two daughters and many pets.

Karmen Smallwood
Assistant Commissioner for Youth Services, Dutchess County
Karmen Smallwood was appointed to serve as Dutchess County’s first Assistant Commissioner for Youth Services in 2020. In this capacity, she leads the Path to Promise initiative, a countywide effort to enhance community assets by bridging research with practice and strengthening cross-sector partnerships. Her responsibilities include overseeing the integration of Boston College’s City Connects individualized student success planning initiative within local public school systems. In 2021, she joined Poughkeepsie New York’s By All Means (BAM) team, bringing more than 15 years of positive youth development and project management experience to the role. Ms. Smallwood serves as Vice Chair of the Youth Opportunity Union (YOU) Advisory Committee. The YOU, a multimillion-dollar hub for youth services, will focus on recreational, educational, and healthy opportunities. In partnership with the Harlem Children’s Zone’s William Julius Wilson Institute, she will strive to connect research with practice and policy to improve outcomes and ensure sustainability. Previously, she served as a law enforcement officer initiating programs to increase access to resources and opportunity for individuals involved in the juvenile and criminal justice systems. She is currently spearheading local initiatives to address violence in schools and communities. Karmen Smallwood holds a M.A. degree in Counseling and Community Psychology from Marist College, Poughkeepsie, New York and a B.A. degree in Psychology from Howard University, Washington, District of Columbia.

James Watson
Co-founder, Poughkeepsie Children’s Cabinet
James Watson is a By All Means (BAM) Community Lead to the City of Poughkeepsie, New York. His BAM role builds on nearly seven years of experience supporting community development and civic renewal in his hometown of Poughkeepsie. In 2019, James partnered with Poughkeepsie’s Mayor, Superintendent of Schools, and community stakeholders to co-found the Poughkeepsie Children's Cabinet, a collective impact organization that convenes leaders across sectors to develop a citywide cradle-to-career agenda for children, youth, and families. James is also a co-founder of Lead for Poughkeepsie, a new AmeriCorps-sponsored public service fellowship program affiliated with Lead for America that aims to attract and retain homegrown talent to pursue social impact careers in the Mid-Hudson Valley region of New York. In addition to his work through BAM, James has spent the past three years helping lead the redevelopment of an abandoned former YMCA site in downtown Poughkeepsie into a state-of-the-art youth center. This new center, the Youth Opportunity Union (known as “the YOU”), is being supported by an initial investment of $25 million from Dutchess County government. The building is being designed by the renowned nonprofit architecture and design firm MASS Design Group. And the center’s programming is being developed in partnership with the Harlem Children’s Zone’s William Julius Wilson Institute. Before returning to Poughkeepsie, James spent a decade helping some of the world's largest media brands launch new ventures on television and in print, including CBS, NBC, and The New York Times. James was a member of the production team behind “60 Minutes Sports,” a spinoff of the legendary Sunday evening newsmagazine produced by CBS News. While at CBS News, he was involved in the production of nearly 20 stories for “60 Minutes Sports” and “60 Minutes.” Prior to joining CBS, James covered three Olympic Games for NBC. He is a two-time Emmy Award winner and four-time nominee. James holds a B.A. from Boston College. He is also a graduate of the Columbia Publishing Course at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
Catalytic Strategies for Sustaining Cross-Sector Collaboration

Elizabeth Gaines
CEO, Children’s Funding Project
Elizabeth Gaines is the founder and chief executive officer of Children’s Funding Project. Begun in 2018, Children’s Funding Project is the response to Elizabeth’s 25-year career in child advocacy that persistently led her to question whether adequate resources were being directed to children. Her career began with leading after-school and community-based youth programs at the Atwood Community Center in Madison, Wisconsin. She later served as youth policy analyst for Citizens for Missouri’s Children, followed by 13 years at the Forum for Youth Investment, where she helped policy leaders develop tools and techniques to improve their use of data, increase their policy alignment, and more efficiently apply resources for greater impact. Elizabeth is also the executive director of Children’s Funding Accelerator, the advocacy arm of Children’s Funding Project. As an expert on children’s policy at the state and local level, Elizabeth has worked with communities in nearly all 50 states to establish children’s cabinets, conduct fiscal maps, and pursue dedicated funding for youth. Her publications include The Adding It Up Guide to Mapping Public Resources for Children, Youth and Families; the Forum for Youth Investment papers on state children’s cabinets and councils; How Public Policy Can Support Collective Impact, co-authored with FSG; and a collaboration on Funding Our Future: Generating State and Local Tax Revenue for Quality Early Care and Education. Since 2018, Elizabeth has guided Children’s Funding Project through over 40 projects with national networks, state and local governments, advocates, and youth leaders. A native of St. Louis, MO, Elizabeth attended the University of Wisconsin-Madison and currently resides in Washington, D.C.

Sagar Desai
Managing Director of Innovation, StriveTogether
Sagar Desai is managing director of innovation at StriveTogether. He is a continuous learner who brings more than 15 years of experience in improving education and economic mobility outcomes, having worked with nonprofits, for-profits, and NGOs in start-up, scaling, and sustaining roles. Previously, Sagar was a senior consultant with Ballmer Group, where he built and executed a national strategy to attract and prepare more racially diverse and proximate leaders to work in community partnerships, investing $35 million in national organizations. Prior to Ballmer Group, Sagar served as a managing director and COO for the Commit Partnership in Dallas. The Partnership is the largest educational intermediary in the country, a coalition of more than 200 organizations serving 750,000 students. In 2019, Sagar launched a statewide campaign to systemically reform how Texas funds public education, resulting in a $6.5 billion increased investment in public education. In addition, he has incubated and scaled regional coalitions to systemically and equitably improve educational outcomes, helping to ensure that every student has an effective educator (Best in Class) and that every student graduates college and career ready (Dallas County Promise). Sagar received his MBA from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University and graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a Bachelor of Science in electrical engineering.
By All Means Speed Networking

Tauheedah Jackson
Director of the Institute for Success Planning, EdRedesign, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Tauheedah Jackson serves as the inaugural Director of the Institute for Success Planning at EdRedesign, where she guides communities in designing personalized, relationship-based systems of support for children and youth through cross-sector collaboration. Prior to joining EdRedesign, she was the Director of Place Based Strategy & Community School Initiatives at the Institute for Educational Leadership (IEL). In this role, she was responsible for engaging networks of leaders in local communities and supervising the programs, logistics, and daily operations of the Coalition. Tauheedah brings to EdRedesign nearly 22 years of experience working in youth development, local government, philanthropy, school districts and out-of-school time programs. She previously served as the Vice President for Strategic Partnerships for the Boys & Girls Clubs of Hartford. In addition, Tauheedah was the Director of the Hartford Partnership for Student Success, leading a cross-sector collaborative partnership that founded and funded the local community schools initiative in Hartford, Connecticut. Under Tauheedah’s leadership, Hartford Community Schools became locally and nationally recognized as an exemplar for its systems-building work. Tauheedah was elected by her peers to serve as co-chair for IEL’s Coalition for Community Schools Leadership Network and as a member of the Coalition’s steering committee, before joining the IEL staff in 2019. A native of Bridgeport, Connecticut, Tauheedah is a Connecticut College graduate and first-generation college student with a background in government and secondary education. She holds a Master's degree in the Education Policy and Management program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Tauheedah is a sought-after presenter and facilitator and sits on various nonprofit boards. She has received several awards recognizing her leadership in the field, including Hartford Business Journal’s 40 Under Forty in 2013.
Friday July 22:
Cradle-to-Career Innovations

Hayling Price
Senior Managing Director of External Engagement, Harlem Children’s Zone
Hayling Price serves as Senior Managing Director of External Engagement for the Harlem Children’s Zone. He drives the organization’s efforts to scale impact by leading HCZ’s public policy and advocacy work while providing strategic advisory support to place-based organizations across the country. He also co-founded the William Julius Wilson Institute, HCZ’s national hub for place-based, people-focused solutions that open pathways to social and economic mobility. Before joining HCZ, Hayling was a strategy consultant at FSG, where he developed the firm’s systems change practice, advised social sector clients on education initiatives, and facilitated the launch of collective impact initiatives in several communities. Prior to joining FSG, Hayling worked as a federal advocate promoting public policy impacting youth and families. Through this work, he supported the rollout of the Promise Neighborhoods initiative, providing advocacy support and technical assistance to cradle-to-career efforts nationwide. Hayling received his B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania. He also received his MBA from Harvard Business School and MPP from the Harvard Kennedy School.

Ross Tilchin
Associate Director of Economic Mobility, Results for America
Ross Tilchin is the Associate Director of Economic Mobility at Results for America. Previously, he was a Senior Policy and Research Assistant for the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution, where he focused on a range of urban economic development and local government policy issues. He has also served as a Kreisman Fellow with Enterprise Community Partners, where he worked to advance several community development initiatives in Chicago. Ross received an M.P.P. from the University of Chicago and a BA in Government and History from Lafayette College.
We look forward to you joining us for the By All Means Summer Retreat. Please see fellow participants here.
By All Means Community Snapshots:
Catalytic Strategies for Sustaining Cross-Sector Collaboration:
- Children's Funding Project Resources
- How to fund Placed Partnerships, if We Want Them to Work
- Powering Cradle to Career Success
- StriveTogether Collaborative Improvement
Additional Pre-Reads may be added closer to the event.
Cradle-to-Career Innovations:
- Results for America Economic Mobility Catalog
- Pre-K 4 SA: Providing high quality, affordable preschool to San Antonio families
- Tuscaloosa Summer Learning Program: Affordable, high-quality summer learning for students in Tuscaloosa City Schools
- Saga Education in Chicago Public Schools: High-dosage tutoring to improve student outcomes in math
EVENT LOCATION
The retreat will begin with registration and breakfast at 9:00am Eastern on Thursday, July 21st at the Gutman Conference Center located on the garden level of the Gutman Library (6 Appian Way Cambridge, MA 02138), followed by opening remarks beginning at 10:00am. Greeters will be stationed at the front of Gutman to welcome you.
If you would like to familiarize yourself with the Harvard campus, you are welcome to check out this Harvard Campus Map. At the top of the webpage, there is a search bar where you can input locations you want to know about.
COVID PROTOCOL
We are committed to following Harvard's COVID-19 public health guidelines for in-person programming. All visitors to the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) campus will be required to follow HGSE Covid policies which at this time require all visitors to attest that they are fully vaccinated and are not experiencing or displaying any known symptoms of COVID-19. Visitors must complete their attestations using HGSE Clear. Additionally, all visitors will be expected to comply with Harvard's masking policy. Currently, face coverings on Harvard's campus are optional in most indoor spaces. HGSE Covid policies are subject to change. Visitors will be kept abreast of any policy changes.
Please note: Visitors must complete their attestations using HGSE Clear prior to arrival. Once you complete the attestation form, you will receive a confirmation via email that you have permission to visit campus. This confirmation will include a digital green checkmark that must be displayed (either in digital or printed form) when you arrive at the event. Visitor attestations are only valid for 7 days so please complete the attestation no sooner than a day before arrival.
ATTIRE
Attire is business casual. The weather forecast is expected to be in the mid-80's during the day.
PARKING
For participants coming from Poughkeepsie, your parking has been organized through your hotel. Please refer to your hotel confirmation email to learn more about parking.
For those participants coming from Somerville and Chelsea, validated parking is available at University Place Garage, 45 University Road. The garage is a 5-minute walk to the event location. Please see a member of the EdRedesign staff to obtain a validation ticket before you return to your car at the end of the day. We regret that we are not able to reimburse out-of-pocket costs. In order to have your parking covered, you must use the validation ticket.
For those guests commuting from Providence, validated parking is available at University Place Garage, 45 University Road. The garage is a 5-minute walk to the event location. Please see a member of the EdRedesign staff to obtain a validation ticket before you return to your car at the end of the day. We regret that we are not able to reimburse out-of-pocket costs. In order to have your parking covered, you must use the validation ticket.
TECHNOLOGY
Wireless internet can be accessed on campus. Login information will be provided the day of the convening.
HOTEL
For those guests traveling out of town, you will have received a hotel confirmation with the hotel location and the process for checking in. The hotel is in walking distance to the convening location.
Thank you for attending our retreat! After the event concludes, please kindly take 5 minutes to complete the event survey. We value your feedback. Thank you!
- Prof. Paul Reville - Kickoff and Welcome
- Sagar Desai, Managing Director of Innovation, StriveTogether
- Elizabeth Gaines, CEO, Children's Funding Project
- Hayling Price, Senior Managing Director, External Engagement, Harlem Children's Zone
- Ross Tilchin, Associate Director of Economic Mobility, Results for America