Joseph A Kitchen Editor & Author

Adrianna Kezar is a professor of higher education at the University of Southern California and codirector of the Pullias Center for Higher Education. Kezar is a national expert of student success, equity and diversity, the changing faculty, change, governance, and leadership in higher education.

Kezar is well published with 18 books and monographs, more than 100 journal articles, and more than 100 book chapters and reports. Recent books include Envisioning the Faculty of the 21st Century (Rutgers University Press, 2016), How Colleges Change (Routledge, 2013), Enhancing Campus Capacity for Leadership (Stanford Press, 2011) and Organizing for Collaboration (Jossey-Bass, 2009).

She is the project director for the Delphi Project on the changing faculty and student success and was just awarded a grant from the Teagle Foundation for institutions that better support faculty and create new faculty models. Yianna Drivalas is a PhD student at the University of Southern California's Rossier School of Education. Prior to graduate school, Drivalas studied creative writing and theater and taught at the community college and high school levels. She is a research associate at the university's Race and Equity Center under the advisement of Shaun R. Harper. Her dissertation work examines White male faculty consciousness and contributions to departmental climate, with a specific focus on race and gender. Joseph A. Kitchen is an Assistant Professor of Higher Education in the Department of Educational and Psychological Studies at the University of Miami. He is also a Research Associate at the Pullias Center for Higher Education at the University of Southern California. He was previously a postdoctoral scholar at the Pullias Center for Higher Education at the University of Southern California, and a postdoctoral fellow at the Science Education Department at Harvard University. Dr. Kitchen conducts quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods research and his research agenda spans several areas, with a central focus on the role of college transition, outreach, and support programs and interventions in promoting equitable outcomes and college success among first generation, low-income, and underrepresented students. Lorelle L. Espinosa serves as assistant vice president for American Council on Education's (ACE) Center for Policy Research and Strategy, where she is responsible for the codevelopment and management of the center's research agenda, which focuses on issues of diversity and equity in twenty-first century higher education, public finance and higher education systems, and transformational leadership. Espinosa has served the higher education profession for nearly 20 years, beginning in student affairs and undergraduate education at the University of California, Davis, Stanford University, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Prior to ACE, she served as a senior analyst at Abt Associates, Inc., and as director of policy and strategic initiatives for the Institute for Higher Education Policy.