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Remembering Our Roots: NJ STRIDE Unites School Leaders for Professional Development on Diversity in Public Education

  • Jan 25
  • 3 min read

WEST WINDSOR, NJ — NJ STRIDE welcomed human resources leaders across New Jersey in October for its annual Professional Development Conference, hosted by the West Windsor Plainsboro Regional School District. This members-only event brought together HR directors, administrators, and district leaders to examine the evolving legal and practical landscape surrounding diversity, recruitment, and equitable staffing in public schools.


This year’s theme, Remembering Our Roots. Reminding us why this consortium was formed and its evolution from CJPRIDE to NJSTRIDE.


"As you look around this room, diversity is our strength," Charity Comella, President of NJ STRIDE and Assistant Superintendent for Personnel at the West Windsor-Plainsboro School District said. "We come from districts large and small, from brand new HR directors to seasoned veterans, and we learn from one another. Despite the noise, we know the good work we have done together and the impact it has had across the state."


The keynote address was delivered by David B. Rubin, Esq., one of New Jersey’s most respected school law attorneys and a nationally recognized authority on diversity and constitutional law in public education. Rubin, who has represented school districts for nearly 50 years and litigated more than 50 published cases, provided a candid and practical walkthrough of what remains legally permissible in promoting diversity and what has never been lawful, despite renewed national attention.





Rubin unpacked the legal frameworks that govern district decision making, including the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, Title VI and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, and the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination, which is significantly broader than its federal counterparts. He outlined how different levels of judicial scrutiny apply depending on the basis for district actions, and clarified how recent federal court rulings, including Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, shape what districts can and cannot do.


The takeaway was clear. Districts may not use an individual person’s race as the deciding factor in a hiring, assignment, admissions, or layoff decision, but they may still pursue race conscious goals using race neutral tools. Those tools include diversifying applicant pools, targeted recruitment, adjusting attendance boundaries, building magnet programs, and creating welcoming workplace environments to ensure broader participation. Rubin emphasized that federal executive orders and Dear Colleague letters do not change the law, regardless of political pressure.


"Much of what the federal government now claims is illegal has been unlawful for decades," Rubin explained. "But many strategies districts rely on to broaden pipelines and strengthen representation remain fully permissible. The law requires nuance, not panic."


Following the keynote, attendees participated in three rounds of breakout sessions led by partner vendors and member districts. Sessions included discussions on equitable accommodations, recruitment strategies, and a presentation on Artificial Intelligence delivered by a NJ STRIDE member district. All materials were accessible through a digital flipbook available by QR code at each table.


The all-day event also offered a valuable opportunity for members to network with professionals in similar roles across neighboring school districts. Throughout the day, participants exchanged ideas, shared best practices, and built meaningful relationships that support continued growth and collaboration beyond the event.



In closing, NJ STRIDE leaders reflected on how member districts have continuously improved hiring practices by standardizing protocols, expanding candidate pools, and collaborating across districts, a collective effort now more important than ever.


"We have consistently come together to strengthen our processes and widen our pipelines," the closing remarks noted. "Today reaffirmed that while the environment is shifting, our mission is steady and still legally sound."


NJ STRIDE will continue to support member districts throughout the year with ongoing networking, collaboration, job fairs, and guidance as districts navigate an increasingly complex legal and political climate.


Photos submitted by NJSTRIDE

Photo 1: Charity Comella and the NJSTRIDE consortium

Photo 2: David B. Rubin, Esq.

Photo 3: Michael Tressa, Kelly Education

Photo 4: Domenic Santoleri, American Fidelity

Photo 5: Dennis Morolda

Photo 6: Stephanie Zorn


 
 

NJSTRIDE is a consortium of school districts throughout New Jersey that strives to attain diverse candidates for teaching positions while offering insightful professional development opportunities to its member districts.

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© 2026 New Jersey Statewide Recruitment of Diverse Educators.
All rights reserved.

Want to learn how to promote inclusion in your district's recruitment? Email info@njstride.org

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