Experiences of Working Conditions Among Special Education Teachers of Color Serving Students With EBD

IF 1.7 3区 心理学 Q2 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Elizabeth F. Bettini, Nelson C. Brunsting, LaRon A. Scott, Lindsey Kaler, Dani Parker Moore, K. O’Brien, Michelle M. Cumming
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Consistent evidence indicates the importance of teachers of color for experiences and outcomes of students of color. Fortunately, extant studies consistently indicate special education teachers (SETs) teaching students with EBD are more likely to be people of color than other SETs. These SETs require supportive working conditions, but, to our knowledge, no studies have examined the experiences of SETs of color serving students with EBD. Thus, the purpose of this study is to examine the experiences of SETs of color who teach students with EBD, investigating how SETs of color rate their working conditions and intent to continue teaching students with EBD. Analyzing two extant data sets, we found that SETs of color experienced strong support from administrators and paraprofessionals, ratings of many working conditions did not differ by race/ethnicity, and SETs of color on average intended to stay in their jobs. However, of great concern, we found significant differences in experiences of school culture, colleague emotional support, and autonomy, with SETs of color rating school culture and colleague emotional support significantly lower and autonomy significantly higher than white SETs.
有色人种特殊教育教师服务EBD学生工作条件的体会
一致的证据表明,有色人种教师对有色人种学生的经历和结果的重要性。幸运的是,现有的研究一致表明,教授EBD学生的特殊教育教师(SETs)比其他特殊教育教师更有可能是有色人种。这些服务组需要支持性的工作条件,但据我们所知,没有研究调查过有色人种服务组为患有EBD的学生提供服务的经验。因此,本研究的目的是考察教授EBD学生的有色人种的经验,调查有色人种如何评价他们的工作条件和继续教授EBD学生的意图。通过分析两个现有的数据集,我们发现有色人种得到了管理人员和辅助专业人员的大力支持,对许多工作条件的评分没有因种族/民族而异,而且有色人种平均打算留在他们的工作岗位上。然而,值得关注的是,我们发现学校文化、同事情感支持和自主性的体验存在显著差异,有色人种对学校文化和同事情感支持的评价显著低于白人,而自主性显著高于白人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
10.50%
发文量
29
期刊介绍: The Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders publishes quality scholarship related to individuals with emotional and behavioral disorders. Articles represent a wide range of disciplines, including counseling, education, early childhood care, juvenile corrections, mental health, psychiatry, psychology, public health, rehabilitation, social work, and special education. Articles on characteristics, assessment, prevention, intervention, treatment, legal or policy issues, and evaluation are welcome.
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