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First page of Drifting from Equity<subtitle>The Relationship Between Academic Drift, Epistemic Drift, and the Role of Equity in Principal Preparation and Professional Development</subtitle>

The passage of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) in 2015 holds significant educational equity questions and concerns for K–12 districts and schools (Black, 2017; Egalite, Fusarelli, & Fusarelli, 2017; Williams & Welsh, 2017). Under ESSA, states have greater latitude over school improvement strategies (Fernandez, LeChasseur, & Weiner, 2017). As ESSA returns education policy-making authority back to the states, equity concerns center on whether and how the newly granted autonomy will (a) improve college and career readiness for traditionally underserved groups (Malin, Bragg, & Hackman, 2017); (b) influence the financial scope and focus of the types of services and opportunities students receive (Fernandez et al., 2017 ); (c) impact tribal sovereignty and self-determination (Mackey, 2017); (d) enhance states’ accountability systems (Marsh, Bush-Mecenas, & Hough, 2017); and (e) shape educational leadership (Fuller, Hollingworth, & Pendola, 2017; Young, Winn, & Reedy, 2017).

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