Skip to main content

Position Details

Academic Personnel

Assistant Teaching Professor of Educational Justice in Early Learning


Position Overview


School / Campus / College: College of Education

Organization: College of Education

Title: Assistant Teaching Professor of Educational Justice in Early Learning


Position Details


Position Description

The College of Education (COE) at the University of Washington (UW) is seeking a visionary educator who will further support and develop the college's commitment to inclusive early learning, culturally- and community-grounded child development, racial equity, and social justice. The Assistant Teaching Professor filling this role will teach, update, and develop undergraduate courses, and support the overall improvement of our Early Care in Education and Early Childhood and Family Studies programs.

 

Our current on-line and in-person early childhood programs rely on critical, sociocultural, and justice-driven perspectives on early childhood development, learning and teaching, and community engagement to prepare students to work with and for young children and families to thrive in a variety of early educational spaces. We are also in the process of developing a new P-3 teaching certification program at the undergraduate level. The person filling this role will co-develop this new program with a team of faculty, staff, students, and community partners working to advance and sustain a diverse early childhood workforce with commitments to educational justice as set forth in the NAEYC’s Advancing Equity in Early Childhood Education Position Statement. In addition, our new colleague will work with and develop just relationships with diverse groups of adult learners who hold both historically privileged and excluded identities, including race, culture, gender identity, sexual identity, social class, age, language, well-being, mental health, disability, and/or religion.

 

The position will carry the non-tenure rank of Assistant Teaching Professor and is a three-year, 9-month position at 100% FTE with two paid months of summer available based on curricular need. Renewal of this appointment will be considered in the second year of the appointment. The base salary range for this position will be $7,778 - $10,000/per month, commensurate with experience and qualifications or as mandated by a U.S. Department of Labor prevailing wage determination. Other compensation associated with this position may include a relocation incentive and a limited commitment of summer salary.

 

Primary responsibilities include:

  1. Serve as a member of both the Early Care and Education (ECE, online) and Early Childhood and Family Studies (ECFS, on campus) program teams (including other faculty, staff, and graduate students) that collaboratively plan and maintain the curriculum for these programs, including both required core courses and electives for undergraduates. Participate in the programs’ ongoing work to make meaningful connections between university and community partners to support young children and their families to thrive in building racially equitable and socially just communities.
  2. Develop and teach additional elective courses in partnership with other faculty that pertain to emerging program needs and the candidate’s areas of expertise and practice. 
  3. Work with the ECFS and ECE academic advisers and Lead Faculty  to provide support structures and processes for monitoring student progress through the program that supports the College’s efforts to diversify the early childhood educator workforce.
  4. Collaborate with the Community-Based Learning Coordinator to cultivate partnerships with university or community organizations to link theory with practice and build shared capacity to do justice and equity work together.
  5. Collaborate with the early learning faculty and staff in the development and implementation of recruitment efforts to support Black, Indigenous, and students of color.  Contribute to practices and curriculum that help BIPOC students thrive as members of our college community.  
  6. Participate in undergraduate events to promote the mission of the college and the Undergraduate Programs.

 

Positive factors for consideration include, but are not limited to:

 

  • instructional expertise in areas such as (but not limited to) (1) critical perspectives and justice-centered approaches to early childhood education, (2) culturally and linguistically sustaining pedagogies; (3) one or more curricular areas such as early childhood math, science, or interactive media and digital literacy
  • experience in coaching and supervising early childhood educators
  • experience and/or instructional expertise in inclusive education and disability studies in early childhood

 

We take up this work as a College of Education acknowledging that we are situated on the unceded, ancestral and traditional territory of the dxʷdəwʔabš(Duwamish) and Coast Salish peoples. We are committed to building partnerships with Black, Indigenous and other communities of color to address historic and ongoing settler colonialism, white supremacy, linguicism, and ableism.

 

The UW College of Education, the nation’s 5th ranked public school of education, dedicates its resources to making excellent education a daily reality for all students and is committed to solving real-world educational challenges and closing opportunity gaps. Members of the College maintain a set of active partnerships with more than 300 educational institutions in the region, state, and nation—schools, school districts, community-based organizations, informal educational institutions, and professional organizations. Our College’s mission leads us to invest in recruiting colleagues who demonstrate experience with, knowledge of, and a commitment to working with culturally diverse communities to address pressing educational challenges and foster a more just and caring society.  The University of Washington is committed to building a vibrant environment for American Indian and Indigenous Studies.  The University’s growing infrastructure includes the Department of American Indian Studies; the Indigenous Wellness Research Institute; the Intellectual House, a longhouse-style facility opened in 2015; the Burke Museum’s Bill Holm Center for the Study of Northwest Indian Art; and the newly developing Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies. University of Washington faculty engage in teaching, research and service.

 

Qualifications

  • An earned doctorate (e.g. PhD or EdD) or foreign equivalent in Education or other relevant discipline or field by the date of appointment, with a strong emphasis in a relevant area, including but not limited to, early learning development, sociocultural learning theory, curriculum and program development, critical and culturally sustaining pedagogies, and/or educational and social policy
  • A minimum of two years of early elementary or preschool teaching experience. Positive factors for consideration include, but are not limited to, teaching experience in settings serving racially, socioeconomically, and culturally diverse communities, including publicly-funded early childhood programs, community-centered non-profits, home-based care or private centers.
  •  

Instructions

Applications should include

1. A detailed letter describing qualifications for the position, including academic preparation and experience

2. Curriculum vitae

3. The names and contact information of 3 individuals who can provide written references (Please do not send letters of recommendation at this time; the College of Education will request letters for all semi-finalists)

4. A one-page diversity statement describing your describing your experience and commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion; your philosophy of teaching and learning and how it supports university-school-community partnerships; and how your work will further the College of Education’s commitment to racial equity and social justice

5. Any additional materials that you might provide to evidence relational, justice-centered teaching practices.

 

Please submit applications electronically to Interfolio at https://apply.interfolio.com/110935. The committee will begin reviewing applications on October 15, 2022. The position will remain open until filled. Appointment to commence on or about September 16, 2023. Please send queries about this position to Dr. Lynn Dietrich, search chair and Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Programs at lynn76@uw.edu.

 

Search committee members include: Zainab Alhassani, zeeuw@uw.edu; Mike Browne, msbrowne@uw.edu;  Jondou Chase Chen, jondou@uw.edu;  Lynn Dietrich (search chair), lynn76@uw.edu; Lakeya Omogun, lomogun@uw.edu;  Miriam Packard, mpackard@uw.edu; Asha Warsame, asha100@uw.edu.

 

To learn more about the University of Washington (http://www.washington.edu) and the College of Education (http://education.washington.edu), our mission and goals, research and outreach activities, faculty, and academic programs, please visit us on the web.

Equal Employment Opportunity Statement

University of Washington is an affirmative action and equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, creed, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, pregnancy, genetic information, gender identity or expression, age, disability, or protected veteran status.

Benefits Information

A summary of benefits associated with this title/rank can be found at https://hr.uw.edu/benefits/benefits-orientation/benefit-summary-pdfs/. Appointees solely employed and paid directly by a non-UW entity are not UW employees and are not eligible for UW or Washington State employee benefits.

Commitment to Diversity

The University of Washington is committed to building diversity among its faculty, librarian, staff, and student communities, and articulates that commitment in the UW Diversity Blueprint (http://www.washington.edu/diversity/diversity-blueprint/). Additionally, the University’s Faculty Code recognizes faculty efforts in research, teaching and/or service that address diversity and equal opportunity as important contributions to a faculty member’s academic profile and responsibilities (https://www.washington.edu/admin/rules/policies/FCG/FCCH24.html#2432).

Privacy Notice

Review the University of Washington Privacy Notice for Demographic Data of Job Applicants and University Personnel to learn how your demographic data are protected, when the data may be used, and your rights.

Disability Services

To request disability accommodation in the application process, contact the Disability Services Office at 206-543-6450 or dso@uw.edu.

COVID-19 Vaccine Requirements and Information

Under University of Washington (UW) Policy, University-compensated personnel must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and provide proof thereof, or receive a UW-approved medical or religious exemption. This requirement will be a condition of any offer associated with this recruitment. For more information, please visit https://www.washington.edu/coronavirus/vaccination-requirement/.

Apply now

The University of Washington is using Interfolio's Faculty Search to conduct this search. Applicants to this position receive a free Dossier account and can send all application materials, including confidential letters of recommendation, free of charge.


For help signing up, accessing your account, or submitting your application, please check out Interfolio's help and support section or get in touch via email at help@interfolio.com or phone at (877)997-8807.

Title IX Notice

Title IX, Title VII, VAWA, Washington State law, and University of Washington policy collectively prohibit discrimination based on sex, sexual orientation, gender, gender expression, pregnant or parenting status, and LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer) identity.

Anyone may contact the Office of the Title IX Coordinator about sex and gender discrimination, including sexual or gender-based harassment, sexual assault, intimate partner violence, stalking, and other forms of sexual misconduct. Anyone who has experienced these behaviors has the right to make a complaint to the University, report to the police, to both, or not at all.

Please see the Title IX website to learn more about how to report or make a formal complaint of sex discrimination, sexual harassment, or other sexual misconduct. You will also find information about supportive measures and the grievance procedures that are utilized for complaints of sexual harassment and other sexual misconduct. Students and employees have access to support measures and resources, whether or not they choose to make a complaint.

Office of the Title IX Coordinator

Valery Richardson, Title IX Coordinator
Mags Aleks, Deputy Title IX Coordinator
4311 11th Ave NE Seattle, WA 98105
206-221-7932
TitleIX@uw.edu