Dr. Nadia A. Bennett (https://www.linkedin.com/in/nadia-a-bennett-/) doesn't just talk about leading; she's lived it, from an air mattress on the floor of a Philly apartment to founding her own national education consulting firm, When Brown Girls Lead.
In this episode of The Exit Interview: A Podcast for Black Educators (https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-exit-interview-a-podcast-for-black-educators/) , I sit down with Dr. Nadia for a raw, spirit-filled conversation about what it actually takes to climb the educational ranks as a Black woman. Dr. Nadia shares the unlikely moments that shaped her path: a stranger's advice in a retail store, the loss of a beloved cousin, and a woman in a Howard cohort who looked her dead in the eyes and said, "You're called to this." She talks openly about the grief of leaving a school where she poured everything, the tokenism she faced as a charter superintendent, and why she walked away from a six-figure leadership role without a plan.
This episode is just as much about what comes after the exit. Dr. Nadia breaks down how she built a thriving consulting firm powered largely by Black women, why psychological safety matters more than job security, and what she wishes someone had told her before she stepped into the principalship.
If you've ever felt the tension between ambition and belonging, between sacrifice and self-preservation, this episode is for you.
(https://www.linkedin.com/search/results/all/?keywords=%23blackeducatorsbewell&origin=HASH_TAG_FROM_FEED)







