About

The DIAL EE design process began in April 2019, bringing together a design team of four early learning leaders from districts across California. The team discussed the challenges and opportunities of operating early learning programs within a school district; the challenges, barriers, and successes they experienced; the conditions that helped drive innovation and success; and their needs as leaders to be effective. DIAL EE also engaged a diverse set of national, state, and local early education experts, research, and innovative leaders and organizations as partners to support the design and development of DIAL EE’s work.
African American baby girl playing with ball at home.
Toddler laughing and holding a book to her head.

Design Process

To understand the context the early education leaders were operating in, during the design process, DIAL EE also collected and reviewed data in the form of reports on early education in California, CSPP funding data, and a survey of the design team members’ districts. This informed the development of a three-year professional development curriculum for DIAL EE fellows. The plan detailed annual themes and quarterly activities and topics, including community summits, professional learning, personalized coaching, and district implementation activities. The focus themes identified for year one were policy and budget, workforce, and continuous improvement/program quality.

However, within the last few years, DIAL EE’s work has expanded rapidly to respond to the unprecedented needs of families, children, early learning district leaders, and school districts due to the pandemic and new policy developments in California, including universal TK.

Team

Carla Bryant's baby photo.

Carla Bryant

Executive Director

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Dr. Carla Bryant has over thirty years of national experience creating culturally competent policies, programs, and procedures for comprehensive early learning, P-3, elementary, family support, and after-school programs. She is the co-founder of the Center for District Innovation and Leadership in Early Education (DIAL EE) which sits in Cultivate Learning at the University of Washington. DIAL EE focuses on supporting school districts to succeed in creating and implementing effective early learning structures that assist children from communities with less social, political, and monetary capital to build a strong educational foundation.  

Previously as the Chief of the Early Education Department for San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD), Dr. Bryant was successful in implementing a P-12 vision, aligning curriculum and instruction across grades, P-3. Dr. Bryant oversaw the development and implementation of Transitional Kindergarten (TK) in SFUSD and integrated community-based and district early education practices through strategic partnerships. During Carla’s tenure, SFUSD’s kindergarten readiness benchmark improved from 37% to 55% in three years.    

Before going to SFUSD, Dr. Bryant was a strategic advisor for the City of Seattle where she co-created the Seattle Early Education Collaborative (SEEC), a community-based early learning system that joined disparately funded programs (federal, state, local, and private) into one system that included joint assessment and accountability, professional development, and transition processes. SEEC was an integral part of the Seattle Public Schools P-3 model and was highlighted by the National League of Cities as one of four cities with progressive plans to align the early learning and K-12 education systems. 

Dr. Bryant received her Ph.D. from the University of Washington in special education, M.Ed. in early childhood education from Georgia State University, and B.B.A. from the University of Central Oklahoma.

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Karen Vang

Project and Communications Manager

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Karen Vang is the Program Manager at the Center for District Innovation And Leadership in Early Education. She provides administrative and operational support. Before joining DIAL EE, Karen was responsible for managing early literacy assessments in Oakland, CA, for over 1000 children, conducting data analysis for continuous program improvement, and coordinating professional development across multiple agencies at the Kenneth Rainin Foundation. She initially began her career in early childcare as a student assistant with infants and toddlers, and has also worked as a literacy tutor in a Transitional Kindergarten classroom. Karen holds a BA from the University of California, Berkeley.

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Alyssa Kirkpatrick

Program Coordinator

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Alyssa was born and raised in Salinas, California and moved to Seattle in 2015, where she graduated from Seattle University with a degree in marketing and management. She started her career working in Higher Education and recreational facilities doing social media and event management before becoming a program coordinator of events and initiatives for Cultivate Learning at the University of Washington. Being relatively new to the early childhood education field, Alyssa is dedicated to finding new and unique ways to engage with providers and policymakers to improve the quality of education for young children. In her free time, Alyssa loves to cook, do puzzles, and listen to new music with her partner and two cats.

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Mike Browne

Sr. Director of Community Engagement, Cultivate Learning

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Mike Browne (he/him) is the Senior Director of Community Engagement for Cultivate Learning at the University at Washington. He’s a New York raised, Afro-Caribbean, former tap-dancer and collegiate athlete, working towards dismantling White Supremacy and forms of oppression in our society. After exchanging his tap and football shoes for a chance to live and work in London and Spain, he returned back to the states and to his passion of early learning as an educator, coach, and consultant. Bringing with him his sense for discovery, wonder, and awe, he addresses the social and political crisis in education and care that results in the physical and psychological harm of our youngest citizens. He co-hosts a podcast called “Napcast” (available on Spotify and Apple Music) with his buddy Nick Terrones (he/him) that explores the intersection of race, culture, and identity in ECE. Follow him on Twitter @miguelitobrowne

Alyssa Kirkpatrick's baby photo

Sherri Killins Stewart

Consultant

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Sherri Killins Stewart, Ed. D is the President/CEO of Leaders Making It Possible. Dr. Stewart has worked with and on behalf of children, families, and communities in various ways for more than 35 years, both as a direct care provider and in leadership roles. She leads work to define and create intentional practices that increase opportunity and remove barriers in early childhood systems, policies, and programs. Dr. Killins Stewart has worked at multiple levels in various states and communities to create tailored actions to benefit young children and their families. Dr. Killins Stewart holds a nursing degree from the University of Pittsburgh, a Master of Administrative Science from Johns Hopkins University, and a Doctorate in Counseling Psychology from the University of Sarasota. Dr. Killins Stewart  earned a Massachusetts Superintendents license in 2013.

Advisory Committee

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Gail Joseph

Founding Director

Cultivate Learning

Susan Kagehiro's headshot.

Susan Kagehiro

Director of Programs

Stuart Foundation

Elliot Regenstein's baby photo.

Elliot Regenstein

Partner

Foresight Law+Policy

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Janet Schulze, Ed.D.

Superintendent

Pittsburg Unified School District

Ashley Wiliams' baby photo.

Ashley Williams

Vice President of Programs

Jumpstart

Collaborators

Our work is rooted in the belief that we can effect change and increase our impact when collaborating with others whose work is complementary to our goals. Our collaborators are supporters and advocates of our work.
Catalyst California logo
Partnership for Children and Youth logo