Maren Oberman

Clinical Assistant Professor, Marsal Family School of Education at University of Michigan School of Education

Biography

Dr. Maren Oberman is a clinical assistant professor at the University of Michigan School of Education. She teaches both in the Educational Studies department and in the Elementary MA and Certification program. Oberman’s areas of expertise include: leadership growth & development, teaching & teacher policy issues, issues of equity & identity in education, coaching, mentoring, & instructional leadership.

Oberman’s research and practice has focused on increasing the status, respect, and value of teachers through preparation, meaningful professional development, and building leadership capacity. Her goal is to increase the quality and effectiveness of the U.S. K-12 educator force through reflective practice, inquiry-based improvement strategies, and personal leadership development. She is also deeply invested in promoting equity and justice in American education, through teaching, leadership, and community involvement.

Prior to joining the faculty at the Marsal Family School of Education, Oberman worked (in Massachusetts, Illinois, and California) as a K-12 teacher, an instructional coach, an administrator in schools and districts, and a teaching fellow at the graduate level. She earned her doctorate in educational leadership (EdLD) at the Harvard Graduate Marsal Family School of Education, including a residency at the central office leadership level in the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD). Through her work at LAUSD, Oberman completed her doctoral capstone, “Accountability, Coherence, and Improvement: Leadership Reflection and Growth in the Los Angeles Unified School District.” She is a certified Data Wise coach and she serves on the Advisory Board of the Data Wise Improvement Project at the Harvard Graduate Marsal Family School of Education.

Read about executive education

Other experts

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.