Seeing the Visibly Invisible: An Intersectional Analysis of the Employee Experiences of Black Female Rural Educators

Henry Tran, Kay M. Cunningham, S. Hardie, Tammy Taylor, Rinice Sauls
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background/Context: Progressive human resources thinking has suggested the importance of employee experiences for workforce engagement, inclusion, and retention, but the intentional design of positive employee experiences requires a deep understanding of workers’ lived experiences in order to respond to their differentiated needs. Although the repeated marginalization of educators who are women, people of color, and from rural spaces have each received attention in their respective literature, little scholarship has intentionally studied the work lives of those who claim all three identities simultaneously. Purpose: Based on this omission, the present work employs an intersectionality analysis to seek understanding of the employee experiences of Black female rural educators across their career cycles, with the goal of helping employers better craft supportive work experiences for them. Research Design: Data are collected from semistructured phenomenological interviews with 10 rural Black principals across five school districts, who are asked to reflect on the experiences of their education career journey, from teaching to school leadership. Conclusion/Recommendations: Findings suggest that the participants’ racial, gender, role, and context identities uniquely impacted each phase of their employee life cycle and therefore require customized attention.
看到看得见的、看不见的:农村黑人女性教育工作者工作经历的交叉性分析
背景/背景:进步的人力资源思想已经提出了员工体验对劳动力投入、包容和保留的重要性,但积极员工体验的有意设计需要深入了解员工的生活体验,以满足他们的差异化需求。尽管女性教育者、有色人种教育者和来自农村的教育者在各自的文学作品中都受到了关注,但很少有学者有意研究同时拥有这三种身份的人的工作生活。目的:基于这一遗漏,本研究采用交叉性分析来寻求对黑人女性农村教育工作者在其职业周期中的员工体验的理解,目的是帮助雇主更好地为他们提供支持性的工作体验。研究设计:数据收集自对5个学区10名农村黑人校长的半结构化现象学访谈,这些校长被要求反思他们的教育生涯之旅,从教学到学校领导。结论/建议:研究结果表明,参与者的种族、性别、角色和背景身份对其员工生命周期的每个阶段都有独特的影响,因此需要定制化的关注。
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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