June 15–17, 2026

Loews Chicago Downtown | Chicago, IL

2026 Featured Speakers

2026 Speakers To Be Announced Soon

Michael Horn

Award-Winning Author and Co-Founder of the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation

Michael Horn is the award-winning author of several books, including the national bestseller, Job Moves: 9 Steps for Making Progress in Your Career; teaches at the Harvard Graduate School of Education; and co-founded the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, a non-profit think tank. He strives to create a world in which all individuals can build their passions, fulfill their potential, and live a life of meaning through his writing, speaking, and work with a portfolio of education organizations.

Michael is also the author of From Reopen to Reinvent: (Re)creating School for Every Child; Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns; Blended: Using Disruptive Innovation to Improve Schools; Choosing College; and Goodnight Box, a children’s story. He cohosts the top education podcasts Future U and Class Disrupted and writes the Substack newsletter The Future of Education. Michael also serves as an executive editor at Education Next, is a contributor to Forbes, and his work has been featured in outlets such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, and NBC. His 2024 Harvard Business Review article, “Why Employees Quit,” won the 2025 Warren Bennis award for the best HBR article on leadership. Michael serves on the board and advisory boards of a range of education organizations, including Imagine Worldwide and Minerva University.

He was selected as a 2014 Eisenhower Fellow to study innovation in education in Vietnam and Korea. Michael holds a BA in history from Yale University and an MBA from the Harvard Business School.

Elizabeth Markle

Founding Executive Director, Open Source Wellness and “Community As Medicine;” Community Mental Health Professor, California Institute of Integral Studies

Dr. Elizabeth Markle is a licensed psychologist, speaker, writer, researcher, and Associate Professor of Community Mental Health at California Institute of Integral Studies. She is the co-founder of Open Source Wellness, an Oakland-based nonprofit offering experiential behavioral health and wellness via a "Community As Medicine" approach in collaboration with healthcare providers and insurers. Dr. Markle earned her doctorate in Counseling Psychology from Northeastern University and her M.A. in Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute. She completed her pre-doctoral internship at Cambridge Health Alliance/Harvard University, and her postdoctoral training in Primary Care-Mental Health Integration at the San Francisco VA Medical Center. Dr. Markle is a thought leader in the field of health and wellness and has been sought-after as a consultant for her unique insights and expertise in clinic-community integration, innovative approaches to mental health, and group facilitation.

Richard Kahlenberg

Director of the American Identity Project at the Progressive Policy Institute

Richard D. Kahlenberg is an education and housing policy researcher, writer, consultant, and speaker. He is also Director of Housing Policy and Director of the American Identity Project at the Progressive Policy Institute and a professorial lecturer at George Washington University's Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration. He was recently featured in a front-page New York Times profile on his policy work as a "liberal maverick."

The author or editor of 20 books, Kahlenberg has been recognized primarily for his expertise in three policy areas: affirmative action in higher education, where he has been called “arguably the nation’s chief proponent of class-based affirmative action in higher education admissions”; diversity in K-12 schools, where he has been labeled “the intellectual father of the economic integration movement” in K–12 schooling; and zoning barriers to housing opportunities, where his work on how housing policies inhibit educational opportunities made him one of Washingtonian magazine’s top 25 most influential people shaping education policy.

Kahlenberg’s articles have been published in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, the Atlantic, the New Republic, and elsewhere. He has appeared on ABC, CBS, CNN, FOX, MSNBC, PBS, and NPR. His books include: "Class Matters: The Fight to Get Beyond Race Preferences, Reduce Inequality, and Build Real Diversity at America's Colleges" (PublicAffairs Books, 2025); "Excluded: How Snob Zoning, NIMBYism, and Class Bias Build the Walls We Don't See" (PublicAffairs Books, 2023); "A Smarter Charter: Finding What Works for Charter Schools and Public Education" (with Halley Potter) (Teachers College Press, 2014); "Why Labor Organizing Should Be a Civil Right: Rebuilding a Middle-Class Democracy by Enhancing Worker Voice" (with Moshe Marvit) (Century Foundation Press, 2012); "Tough Liberal: Albert Shanker and the Battles Over Schools, Unions, Race and Democracy" (Columbia University Press, 2007); "All Together Now: Creating Middle-Class Schools through Public School Choice" (Brookings Institution Press, 2001); "The Remedy: Class, Race, and Affirmative Action" (Basic Books, 1996); and "Broken Contract: A Memoir of Harvard Law School" (Hill & Wang/Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1992).

"The Remedy" was named one of the best books of the year by the Washington Post, "Tough Liberal" was named one of the best books written on labor unions by the Wall Street Journal, and "Excluded" won the Goddard Riverside Book Prize for Social Justice. Kahlenberg has been a nonresident scholar at Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public Policy, a Senior Fellow at The Century Foundation, a Fellow at the Center for National Policy, a visiting associate professor of constitutional law at George Washington University, and a legislative assistant to Senator Charles S. Robb (D-VA).

His work has been supported by leading foundations including Broad, Jack Kent Cooke, Ford, Gates, Hewlett, Lumina, Nellie Mae, Spencer, Walton, and W.T. Grant. He serves on the advisory boards of the Pell Institute and the Albert Shanker Institute. He is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School.

Kindra Hall

Customer Experience & Storytelling Expert in Business; Best-Selling Author; Chief Strategy Officer at Steller Collective

Kindra Hall told her first story in the spring of 1992. Long before storytelling became a business buzzword, Kindra was fulfilling a 5th-grade language arts assignment by reading a story to a room full of out-of-control 3rd graders. Instead of reading from the pages, she set the storybook aside and told the story herself. Within the first few sentences, she held those unruly 3rd graders in the palm of her hand and knew, in that moment, she had stumbled upon something powerful. 

Since that time, Hall has become the go-to expert for storytelling in business and beyond. She is the best-selling author of "Stories that Stick: How Storytelling Can Captivate Customers, Influence Audiences, and Transform Your Business." "Stories that Stick" debuted at #2 on the Wall Street Journal Bestseller List, and companies like Forbes and Gartner say it “may be the most valuable business book you read.” Her second book, "Choose Your Story, Change Your Life" is one of the Next Big Idea Club’s top 10 happiness books. Her newest book, "The Story Edge," inspires leaders to harness the power of stories to win in business. 

Kindra Hall is a sought-after storytelling keynote speaker trusted by global brands to deliver messages that inspire teams and individuals to better communicate the value of their company, their products, and their individuality through strategic storytelling. Hall is also the former Chief Storytelling Officer at Success Magazine, where she shared the inspiring, often untold stories of achievers like Daymond John, Deepak Chopra, James Altucher, and Misty Copeland in print and on the podcast "Success Stories with Kindra Hall." 

Kindra lives in Manhattan with her husband, young son, and daughter. When she is not traveling the world speaking, Kindra can usually be found at spin class, spending time with friends or exploring the city with her family.

Eboo Patel

Founder & President of Interfaith America

Eboo Patel is a civic leader, speaker, and author advancing the notion that diversity is a treasure and cooperation across our difference is the key for everybody to thrive. Recognized as “one of America’s best leaders” by U.S. News and World Report, he is the Founder and President of Interfaith America, the nation’s leading interfaith organization.

Under Eboo’s leadership, Interfaith America has grown into a $20 million-per-year organization that partners with governments, universities, businesses, and civic organizations to transform faith into a bridge of cooperation rather than a barrier of division.

Eboo’s impact extends to serving on President Obama’s Inaugural Faith Council, delivering hundreds of keynote addresses, and authoring five influential books, including “We Need to Build: Field Notes for Diverse Democracy.” A Rhodes Scholar and Ashoka Fellow, Eboo earned a doctorate in the sociology of religion from Oxford University.

Jane Kamensky

President and CEO of Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello

Jane Kamensky is President and CEO of Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello. A leading historian of early America and the United States, she worked for three decades as a professor and higher education leader, most recently as Jonathan Trumbull Professor of American History at Harvard University and Pforzheimer Foundation Director of the Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at Harvard Radcliffe Institute. She brings to her work at Monticello a strong sense of civic purpose and a commitment to the ways that rigorous scholarship and compelling, honest storytelling help to build citizen capacity and revitalize the American experiment.

Kamensky is the author or editor of numerous books spanning four centuries of American history, including A Revolution in Color: The World of John Singleton Copley (2016), which won four major prizes and was a finalist for several others. Her most recent book, Candida Royalle and the Sexual Revolution (2024), was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Biography. Her work has been supported by fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the Guggenheim Foundation, among others.

A former Commissioner of the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery and past Trustee of the Museum of the American Revolution, Kamensky is as a member of the National Advisory Council of More Perfect and of the Executive Committee of the national history-civics initiative Educating for American Democracy, among many other public history roles. From 2018 through 2025, she served as a scholarly advisor and on-camera expert for the Florentine Films/ Ken Burns documentary, The American Revolution.

Kamensky holds a BA and a PhD in American history from Yale University. She lives in Charlottesville with Dennis Scannell, her husband of 39 years.

Jonathan Martin

Politics Bureau Chief and Senior Political Columnist, POLITICO

Jonathan Martin is the politics bureau chief and senior political columnist at POLITICO, where he writes a reported column.  Prior to starting his column in 2022, Martin was the national political correspondent for The New York Times.  Covering elections in all 50 states, he served as the publication’s top political reporter for nearly a decade.  He is the co-author This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America’s Future, which spent three weeks on The New York Times best-seller list and gave readers in-the-room access to the extraordinary events of the 2020 election and its aftermath.  Martin regularly provides on-air political analysis for ABC, NBC and CBS.  He and his wife, Betsy, live in Washington and New Orleans.

Additional speakers will be announced soon.

Eduventures Summit 2026

June 15-17, 2026

Loews Chicago Downtown Hotel