Black Female Teachers

Diversifying the United States' Teacher Workforce

Chance W Lewis editor Abiola Farinde-Wu editor Ayana Allen-Handy editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Emerald Publishing Limited

Published:26th Jul '17

Should be back in stock very soon

Black Female Teachers cover

With the emergence of a diverse public school student population, existing literature affirms the existence of a Black teacher shortage and the low representation of teachers of color in U.S. public schools. Although there are over 3 million public school teachers, African American teachers only comprise approximately 8 percent of the public school teaching workforce. In fact, the education field is dominated by White, middle-class teachers, particularly, White female teachers. 
While the retention of all teachers of color is a pertinent issue, an examination of Black female teachers who can assist in diversifying the teaching field is timely and warranted. Despite Black females’ historic role in public education and that teaching is a female-dominated profession, Black female teachers represent only 7.7 percent of the American teaching force, while students of color represent almost 49 percent of the total student enrolment.  
This important, timely, and provocative book places recruitment and retention of Black female teachers at the center. The contributions address not only the recruitment of Black female teachers but also discuss mechanisms necessary to retain them. Thus, this collection not only focuses on recruiting and retaining Black female teachers for the sake of having their representation in schools; rather, authors consider some of the implicit (and overt) nuances that these teachers experience in schools across the United States.

Educators from the US offer eight essays that consider the experiences, recruitment, and retention of black female teachers and the need to diversify the US workforce with these teachers. They describe the historical and contemporary landscape of black female teachers, including their participation in the US workforce across key phases of American schooling and civil rights and the ideas and pedagogies of Anna Julia Cooper and Septima Poinsette Clark; the experiences of these teachers, including why they teach in urban schools and the development of cultural competence to teach for social justice; and retention aspects, with discussion of working conditions, interpersonal relationships, and turnover, risk for occupational stress, racial congruence, and professional commitment, and policy interventions to deal with attrition and turnover. -- Annotation ©2017 * (protoview.com) *

ISBN: 9781787144620

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

224 pages