
CSBA spoke to Yam about the value of advocacy and what local educational agencies can do to promote leadership opportunities among California’s students — particularly its Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) youth. The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.
My story is heavily influenced by my background as someone who is Chinese American. My family immigrated from Hong Kong to be here, to attend college, to attend local public schools. My mom is actually a product of [Los Angeles Unified School District] public schools. My family is here because of education and the promise of a better life through the power of education. I hope to continue to carry that story whether I’m still on the school board or whether I serve in other positions. I think that it’s very important that we carry our cultural experiences, we carry our cultural heritage with us. I’d hope that other people who are in these positions of power carry the stories of their ancestors and experiences with them, especially in how we work with other communities and how we think about our impact because we don’t represent just ourselves, we also represent others, and how can we intermingle those two concepts?
Growing up in in my local public schools, I saw a lot of teachers who looked like me. When there’s teachers, or when there’s other school board members who are serving these positions who are folks who look like me, that makes me feel like, I can also do that too. I’m not limited to the stereotypes or to the perceptions that society has placed upon people who are AAPI or any other minority group for that matter. We’re not just limited to that because we can see ourselves as lawyers, educators, elected leaders.

Check out an extended version of this Q&A at blog.csba.org/aapi-heritage-month-advocacy.