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(TAE) rubric. Both frameworks call for inclusive excellence, transformative teaching, and strong community partnerships to prepare a public health workforce equipped to meet evolving challenges. The study situates these educators as change agents operating within a shifting higher education and public health landscape marked by a lack of support and incentives for teaching within a challenging public health climate. Qualitative, exploratory methods engaged awardees through one in-person focus group and multiple individual virtual interviews. These conversations explored strategies aligned with both the FTF 2030 and TAE frameworks. The researchers analyzed the data using a modified grounded theory approach and mapped findings to both frameworks, validating themes through member-checking with participating coauthors. Three cross-cutting findings emerged as distinguishing characteristics of the awardees: (1) adoption of transformative teaching approaches; (2) teaching as a vocational calling; and (3) advancing change beyond the classroom. Quantitative findings showed that awardees implemented 50 strategies aligned with FTF 2030 categories of practice and 18 with TAE categories of impact, emphasizing student-centered learning, institutional change, and community-engaged practice. Facilitators included supportive leadership and teaching-focused learning communities. Barriers included undervaluing teaching relative to research and the overreliance on student evaluations. Results highlight how these exemplary educators deploy a variety of innovative strategies and practices to prepare students for the workforce, foster belonging, and drive institutional change to promote teaching excellence. Their work underscores the importance of empathy, humility, and resilience as core professional competencies. Sustaining and scaling such innovation requires institutionalized support and resources that recognize teaching as central to academic public health's mission. In times of disruption, these transformative educators serve as inspiration to their peers and enhance their institutions' reputation for teaching excellence, thus increasing prospective students' interest as well as better preparing graduates for professional practice in protecting the public's health during the current and future challenging times.
Weist et al. (Wed,) studied this question.