Jared Buswell
Jared Buswell ran for election to the Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education to represent District 1 in Oklahoma. He lost in the general election on April 4, 2023.
Buswell completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. Click here to read the survey answers.
Biography
Jared Buswell was born in Rockford, Illinois. He earned a bachelor's degree from the Oral Roberts University, College of Arts and Sciences in 2005. His career experience includes working as a nonprofit director.[1]
Buswell has been affiliated with the following organizations:[1]
- Tulsa Chamber of Commerce
- Southwest Tulsa Chamber of Commerce
- Young Businessmen of Tulsa
- Regent Bank Executive Lunch Series; Faith in Business Series
- Oklahomans Against Trafficking Humans (OATH)
- Access Tulsa & Collab Tulsa
- Turkey Urban Wilderness Coalition
- Wesleyan Covenant Association
- Influencers Global Ministries
- 10 Days Prayer Network
- International Virtual Reality Photographers Association
- Asbury Church, Tulsa, OK
- City Elders, Tulsa, OK
- Experience Writing, Tulsa, OK
- Releasing Purpose, Tulsa, OK
- Legacy Covenant Foundation, Tulsa, OK
Elections
2023
See also: Tulsa Public Schools, Oklahoma, elections (2023)
General election
General election for Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education District 1
Incumbent Stacey Woolley defeated Jared Buswell in the general election for Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education District 1 on April 4, 2023.
Candidate | % | Votes | ||
✔ | ![]() | Stacey Woolley (Nonpartisan) | 68.3 | 1,511 |
![]() | Jared Buswell (Nonpartisan) ![]() | 31.7 | 702 |
Total votes: 2,213 | ||||
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Nonpartisan primary election
The primary election was canceled. Incumbent Stacey Woolley and Jared Buswell advanced from the primary for Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education District 1.
Endorsements
Buswell received the following endorsements.
- U.S. Rep. Kevin Hern (R)
- Gov. Kevin Stitt (R)
- State Rep. Cody Rogers (R)
- State Rep. Chris Banning (R)
- State Rep. Lonnie Sims (R)
- State Rep. Mark Tedford (R)
- School board member E'Lena Ashley (Nonpartisan)
- Tusla Cnty. Commissioner Kelly Dunkerley (R)
- Tulsa City Council member Grant Miller (Nonpartisan)
- Lt. Gov. Matt Pinnell (R)
- State Supt. Ryan Walters (R)
- Frmr. Tulsa Mayor Dewey Bartlett
- Frmr. Okla. Gov. Frank Keating (R)
- Tulsa County, Okla., Republican Party
- Americans for Prosperity
- Awake Oklahoma
- City Elders
- Greater Tulsa Association of Realtors
- Moms for Liberty, Tulsa County, Okla.
- Oklahoma 2nd Amendment Association
- Oklahomans for Health and Parental Rights
- Parents' Rights in Education Oklahoma
- Patriot Pastors
- School Boards 4 Kids
- Tulsa Parents Voice
- Tulsa Today
- Women for Tulsa
Campaign themes
2023
Ballotpedia survey responses
See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection
Jared Buswell completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2023. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Buswell's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.
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|Locally, Jared owns an award-winning virtual tour and commercial photography company. Recently he started two additional nonprofits training individuals to discern and implement their unique vocation journey and legacy planning.
Jared is a graduate of Oral Roberts University, completing programs from four different departments. After graduation, ORU hired him to teach interactive media, graphic design, and soon the senior mass communication capstone course serving international humanitarian projects, until he launched his VR photography small business in 2009. His diverse education experience includes designing online courses, writing curriculum, training the 2010 federal census workers who surveyed west Tulsa, and assisting an oral education project for Afghanistan's first presidential election.
Jared is a National Merit Scholar, a Google Trusted Photographer, certified life design coach, and a 15-year resident of west Tulsa. He and Janice are nearing 17 years of marriage.- Restore representation of the community on the Tulsa school board (parents, support staff, and teachers instead of special interests).
- Dramatically improve literacy and key skills so students enjoy mastering new abilities and graduate with real life skills they need.
- Make schools safe and stable so students have a consistent learning environment and teachers have better support to teach.
Among the many places in the world where I could serve, I was particularly urged to prioritize Tulsa Public Schools because of the board’s decisions to close the school district to in-person learning for most of a school year. Those decisions – and the choices to not make a comprehensive plan to radically recover from lost learning opportunities – alarmed me to stop other pursuits I was engaged in to serve in this capacity.
When I was in a restaurant having coffee with someone, Jeanie came in to buy girl scout cookies from him, to my surprise. While they were out, I chatted with the waitress about Jeannie Cue, and the waitress told me, "One time, she came in hear and paid for everyone in the restaurant!" Then she said she wanted to be like Jeannie when she grew up - and gave a cute sigh. The funny thing is that their age difference is not that much.
Often discussions of "improving schools" or "re-imagining education" stray too long in either theoretical platitudes or, on the other hand, focuses only on yet another tactical improvement-of-the-day that promises to solve a problem but only lays a new burden on teachers. Healthy school boards can and must discuss strategy, which requires each participant to simultaneously hold both the values and mission of the organization, along with measuring and fine-tuning individual tactics. That quality of discussion is rare, but I encourage you to peruse that report if you want to understand my baseline for a healthy educational philosophy that works in real life.
Intellectual accolades (such as National Merit Scholar) and experiences (such as finishing Calculus 1, 2, 3, and Differential Equations by age 17) from my very positive public school K-12 experience: These experiences help me view educational reform from a position of health (what actually works), rather than only fixing what is apparently wrong (temporary Band-Aids that don’t address root issues, or new-fangled ideas that create two new problems for every one they solve).
Small business entrepreneurship, particularly in VR photography: This experience of photographing over 2,000 places for hire in eight states equips me with the knowledge of what issues diverse industries face and how they operate. I am an on-the-ground expert knowing many of our regional companies and what they need from an educated workforce, as well as having walked the difficulties of starting and running my own small venture that I am still operating 14 years later.
Varied education specialist experiences, from teaching at the university level (including a senior capstone source), to designing a university degree program, to producing online courses, to writing curriculum, and studying educational design: these experiences help me appreciate and ask the right questions of the instructional design aspects of our school district.
A public school district in Oklahoma has two “bosses:” the state of Oklahoma and the local community. While the state charters the district, provides the majority of funding, and establishes legal requirements for its operations, the local community informs the priorities for the schools on all matters not delineated by the state. A healthy school board investigates and confirms that district operations meet state requirements, while simultaneously advancing the agendas of local parents, teachers, and invested leaders for the advancement of quality education in the community.
The public trusts their local school districts with significant life-changing and community-building responsibilities. The job of the school board is to ensure that this priceless trust in the district is being rewarded in the present and will continue to be merited in the future.
In that light, the primary work of an individual school board member is to listen to invested voices, investigate potential operational infractions, foresee dangers to the district’s mission, prioritize resources for strategic success, speak effectively for the best ideas to build coalitions of agreement, and to identify and empower effective champions to execute healthy solutions to achieve the public’s goals. This unpaid job is not for the faint of heart. Doing genuinely well might not be recognized by many people. It’s a leadership role listening, serving, and empowering many kinds of people to accomplish their best work for children and families.
This job lasted one summer. The manager loved my work so much that he wanted me to continue,even if only one day per month, but my school's weekend schedule was so packed there was not a way to make it work.
The first one that comes to mind is "Dynamics of World History" by Christopher Dawson. I always love books that help me dive into the real ROOT reality of various questions and debates people have. This collection of essays from an amazing thinker presents a metahistory that approaches a description of what really happened and still is happening in the present age from a really wide (and accurate) lens.
A public school district in Oklahoma has two “bosses:” the state of Oklahoma and the local community. While the state charters the district, provides the majority of funding, and establishes legal requirements for its operations, the local community informs the priorities for the schools on all matters not delineated by the state. A healthy school board investigates and confirms that district operations meet state requirements, while simultaneously advancing the agendas of local parents, teachers, and invested leaders for the advancement of quality education in the community.
The public trusts their local school districts with significant life-changing and community-building responsibilities. The job of the school board is to ensure that this priceless trust in the district
2) The State of Oklahoma (for legal compliance, and to communicate to them may objective, fact-based ways laws need to be improved to achieve educational outcomes.
3) The superintendent: supporting her in her countless roles and juggling balls. Because she has to wear so many hats, if she needs something the board can give her, then by all needs give her what she need to fulfill our mutual goals of providing strong educations for students, so their family's interests are served.
4) The support staff, teachers, and employees of Tulsa Public Schools - they have the place of honor within #1 as member of the community.
Without waiting for more funding, the school board can hear and implement ideas that multiply the funds Tulsa is spending. There are many available “force multipliers” we can use that derive greater results from paid staff, parents, and community volunteers working together. Mentor relationships for teachers and students, utilizing college interns, and fostering more in-building parental involvement should be considered.
Finally, we can reduce waste in many areas. Our first funds should go to classrooms and staff who work directly with children, then later to consultants for special projects. We must rethink which core functions are outsourced. As Tulsa’s 3rd-largest employer, TPS's HR functions should be brought in-house. Our current food service arrangement is not providing the health students need to learn.
The most impactful investments we make cannot be measured in $.
Don’t pretend that there is infinite money. Also don’t pretend that the lack of money is an excuse to not accomplish something critically important. Where there’s a will, there’s a way.
Find the right people passionate about accomplishing something with their own ingenuity, and release them to do it. Give them the resources they need to accomplish 10x more than the dollar value of what we spent.
Advocate and lobby as individuals at the state capitol, yes, but don't wait for more funds from the state before stepping up and achieving the results our teachers, children, and families need right now. We can accomplish our primary goals without waiting for new state funds by releasing the talent and genius of Tulsa immediately.
These reviews have all been blocked by the special interest voting bloc on the TPS board throughout 2022. My election to the school board will open up this topic of HIGH interest to the community to be on the agenda.
Greater Tulsa Association of Realtors
School Boards for Kids*
Parental Rights in Education
Women for Tulsa
Moms for Liberty - Tulsa County
Pamela Smith Foundation/Mothers Against Injustice
City Elders
Fmr. Governor Frank Keating
Lt. Governor Matt Pinell
House of Representatives District 1 Kevin Hern*
State Senator Cody Rogers
State Representative Lonnie Sims
State Representative Mark Tedford
State Representative Chris Banning
Fmr. Tulsa Mayor Dewey Bartlett
Core human aptitudes include using one’s imagination, hearing and recounting stories and information, writing and drawing with one’s own hand, accomplishing results with a wide variety of people, receiving new and original insights from long periods of thinking or even boredom, and more. Having these experiences empowers a child to desire and employ them more regularly, without being forced or reminded to do them. To have them in one’s arsenal of capabilities is fundamental to develop higher-order thinking and creative skills every student is going to need in today’s world. Having these aptitudes positively affects one’s identity. A student’s mental and psychological development is deeply affected by whether or not they have the capacity to produce as well as to consume, instead of the broad and easy way of only consuming.
School districts need to assume students have free and excessive screen time at home. As such, our learning environments need to be distraction-free places where students can take part in deep academic and social activities they might find otherwise.
Now that all students have access to professional publishing tools (through social media and other means), it is even more important - not less - to have something interesting to say.
Those board decisions – and the additional choice to not make an effective plan to radically recover from lost learning opportunities – alarmed me to look more closely at how TPS makes decisions.
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See also
2023 Elections
External links
Candidate Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education District 1 |
Personal |
Footnotes