The Dr. Cile Chavez Fellowship is intended to inspire diverse, under-represented education leaders to join the RSA and bring their unique perspectives to the helm of Colorado districts. Each year, two RSA fellows are selected to receive financial assistance from the Boettcher Foundation to support costs related to their participation.
“I believe this world is more and more diverse. And recognizing and appreciating diversity will only enhance the lives of students and their journeys in life. To value the merits of a diverse field of superintendents will only enhance the creativity of services, programs, solutions, and ideas.”
– Retired Boettcher Foundation Trustee and longtime Colorado education leader Dr. Cile Chavez.
2024 Dr. Cile Chavez Fellows
Kate Bartlett
Superintendent
Lake County School District
Leadville, Colorado
2024 Fellow
Kate Bartlett has been a part of the public education leadership community in Colorado since 2010. She served as a district leader in Lake County from 2010-19 during a period of intense academic turnaround before going on to work at the state level. Kate served as the Executive Director of School District Operations at the Colorado Department of Education and then as Associate Director of the Colorado School Finance Project before returning to Lake County to become the superintendent.
Joseph Hermocillo
Federal Programs Director
Adams County School District 14
Commerce City, Colorado
2024 Fellow
Offering more than two decades of educational leadership in public and higher education, Joseph Hermocillo is passionate about student learning with a multidisciplinary background serving as a teacher, administrator, consultant, adjunct professor, and community volunteer. Joseph deeply values educational team leadership for making key connections, growing your own, and leveraging funding to connect students and staff with opportunities for success.
Tera Spangler
Superintendent of Schools
Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind
Colorado Springs, Colorado
2024 Fellow
Tera Spangler is the Superintendent at the Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind (CSDB). She is an advocate for accessibility and language access for Deaf, Blind, and DeafBlind students and has been in the field in various roles for 24 years.
2023 Dr. Cile Chavez Fellows
Christian De La Oliva
President/CEO
Chávez/Huerta K-12 Preparatory Academy
Pueblo, Colorado
2023 Fellow
Christian De La Oliva has more than 20 years of experience as an educator. He has served in different capacities, from a paraprofessional, teacher, assistant principal, principal and most recently as an executive leadership coach at the San Diego County Office of Education. He has a track record of improving student achievement in a variety of school settings, building the capacity of staff to provide high-quality instructional programs, and providing equitable access and opportunities for historically underserved students. In the 2023-24 school year, Christian will be leading Chávez/Huerta K-12 Preparatory Academy as their new President/CEO.
Margarita Tovar
Chief Talent Officer
Summit School District
Summit County, Colorado
2023 Fellow
Margarita Tovar is the current Chief Talent Officer at the Summit School District, where she serves as the district’s lead visionary for human capital pipelines and systems. Her career began in 2010 as a teaching assistant in the Houston area, and in 2017, where she became the youngest principal leading a turnaround school. Margarita is committed to achieving excellence in student outcomes through equitable adult inputs.
2022 Dr. Cile Chavez Fellows
Dr. Elizabeth Domangue
Superintendent of Schools
Manitou Springs, Colorado
2022 Fellow
Dr. Domangue’s experience as an educator includes classroom teaching, special education, serving as a building principal and assistant principal, director of curriculum and instruction, and that as assistant professor at the university level.
In her application to become a Chavez Fellow, Dr. Domangue stated, “As a woman, a first-generation college student, and a Cajun from South Louisiana, I have had my own unique challenges navigating educational systems from Kindergarten through my doctoral degree.”
Dr. Jesús Rodríguez
Superintendent
Roaring Fork Schools
Roaring Fork, Colorado
2022 Fellow
Dr. Rodríguez is the newly appointed superintendent of the Roaring Fork School District and a Colorado native, though he most recently served as the chief academic officer for the Dallas Independent School District. Rodríguez is an educational product of Weld RE3-J and 27J school districts in Hudson and Brighton. He led CU-Boulder’s BUENO Center for Multicultural Education, served as principal of Trevista at Horace Mann, and was an instructional superintendent for Denver Public Schools.
In his application to become a Chavez Fellow, Dr. Rodríguez shared, “there are many Latinx students in Roaring Fork Schools who have never had a teacher, principal, or superintendent who looks like them or who speaks their home language. My hiring means we’ll begin to better reflect the racial and cultural diversity of the local communities in Basalt, Carbondale, and Glenwood Springs, which is important for all students. Our entire community has an opportunity, every day, to expand their understanding of cultures different from their own. For students like me, and the majority of the students in Roaring Fork Schools, seeing ourselves reflected in the educators and leaders in our schools can be life-changing and create opportunities for greater dreams to be realized.
2021 Dr. Cile Chavez Fellows
Cindy Lystad
Principal
Sterling High School
Sterling, Colorado
2021 Fellow
Cindy has worked in rural school settings as a classroom teacher, special education instructor and case manager, a gifted and talented teacher and coordinator, a building administrator, and even as a board of education director.
Cindy was chosen as a Chavez Fellow because of her commitment to equity. “I see one of my most impactful contributions to my students and staff right now is to provide hope,” she said. “The bleakness of this past year has left many unmoored. Job losses, food insecurity, and very high COVID positivity rates in Logan County have taken their toll. Although our community’s losses and mental health impacts have not been equitable, our responses will be. I want to lead by example today and inspire others to lead in the future.”
Luis Murillo
Principal
Skoglund Middle School
Center, Colorado
2021 Fellow
Luis is in his seventh year as a Colorado rural school leader. “Holding important seats of service and power are an integral part in supporting the development of equity for students and future leaders,” he said. “It is important for people of color to see people like them in those seats. This begins to break the stereotypes that people of color fill classified positions in education. Furthermore, in supporting equity for students and future education leaders, I believe it is imperative to tap into the pipeline. “