About Me
My name is Camille Ramos-Beal. I am the principal at Palomares Academy of Health Sciences and the director of the Pomona Health Career Ladder Program at Western University.
I have a single subject English credential and a multiple-subjects credential with a supplementary credential in French. I have a master's degree in education from the University of Southern California. I earned my Tier 1 Administrative credential from the Great Leaders for Great Schools Academy facilitated by CalPoly Pomona and Pomona Unified, and I earned a doctoral degree in K-12 Urban Leadership from the University of Southern California.
I am passionate about creating equitable learning opportunities for all students. I believe that all students can learn. By building relationships and supporting our colleagues and our students, we can create the conditions to support learning for all.
I have a single subject English credential and a multiple-subjects credential with a supplementary credential in French. I have a master's degree in education from the University of Southern California. I earned my Tier 1 Administrative credential from the Great Leaders for Great Schools Academy facilitated by CalPoly Pomona and Pomona Unified, and I earned a doctoral degree in K-12 Urban Leadership from the University of Southern California.
I am passionate about creating equitable learning opportunities for all students. I believe that all students can learn. By building relationships and supporting our colleagues and our students, we can create the conditions to support learning for all.
My Educational Philosophy
I believe in social justice and equity. I believe that it is my responsibility and moral imperative to provide equitable access and opportunities to the very best education our schools can provide.
I believe that students can learn anything; therefore, my goal as an administrator is to create an environment where teachers can be passionate, creative, patient, sincere, but most importantly, this teacher must be respectful towards students. I believe that the most important aspects of teaching are the relationships we build. We have a great responsibility to feed the students' minds and hearts. We must make a commitment to work at improving our teaching practices and continue learning and relearning best practices. Teaching is a way of effecting positive change in society; in order for meaningful change to happen, we must not waste our daily opportunities to effect change.