“…In addition to these examples from literacy and art classrooms, Paris (2021) outlines some key features that have emerged across this work: First, "a critical centering" (p. 367) of communities, along with their languages, practices, and knowledges (see also Gilblom et al, 2022); second, honoring students' and other generations of the communities' agency as genuine collaborators in learning; third, efforts to be in "good relationship with the land, the people of the land, with students and communities" (p. 367), which requires reciprocal relationships and genuine decolonial work (Eagle Shield et al, 2020;Lee & McCarty, 2017); and fourth, "critically assess [ing] what to center and sustain" (p. 367) in partnership with communities. These principles are crucial, yet we have only begun to scratch the surface of what CSPs may look like in practice.…”