恢复教师职业种族多样性的合作模式

Christa Agiro, Amy Jomantas, Ganiva Reyes, Maya Dorsey, James Cosby, Sandra Sumerfield, Connie Bowman, Amy Anyanwu, Phyllis Adams, Tammy Schwartz
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摘要

布朗诉教育委员会案的判决导致全国有色人种教师数量减少,而有色人种学生的数量却在增长,68 年后的今天,俄亥俄州代顿地区正在形成一项合作努力,以重新实现教育行业的种族多样化。本文介绍了这一由七个学区、五所高等教育机构(IHEs)、一个县教育服务中心和两个非营利组织领导的、旨在增加种族和民族边缘化教育工作者数量的持续运动。初期工作得到了拨款资金的支持。该项目旨在:(1) 识别有兴趣成为教育工作者的七年级至十一年级学生;(2) 引导学生从高中到大学毕业和取得执照的整个过程中,选择示范途径和关键支持;(3) 为少数族裔的未来教师和新教师提供支持,以培养信心和促进归属感;(4) 促进集体设计的专业发展,以不断更新所有教育场所的文化响应性和包容性文化。这些策略包括:在高中发现未来的教师,建立同龄人群,促进关键的指导,规划自己成长的管道和途径,在大学的关键阶段提供支持,在项目和地区发展积极的文化,促进以边缘化观点为中心的持续专业发展,以及为新兴网络和有机亲和团体提供后勤支持。缺乏支持、学生债务、孤立、歧视以及不受欢迎和反应迟钝的学校环境是需要不断消除的常见障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A collaborative model to restore racial diversity in the teaching profession
Sixty-eight years after the Brown v. Board of Education decision led to a national reduction of teachers of color, even as numbers of students of color grew, a collaborative effort to racially re-diversify the education profession is forming in the Dayton, Ohio region. This article describes this ongoing movement to increase the number of racially and ethnically marginalized educators, led by seven school districts, five institutions of higher education (IHEs), a county educational services center, and two nonprofit organizations. Initial work was supported by leveraging grant funds. The project seeks to (1) identify seventh- through eleventh-grade students interested in becoming educators, (2) direct students into model pathways and critical supports from high school through college graduation and licensure, (3) offer support for minoritized future and new teachers that fosters confidence and promotes belonging, and (4) facilitate the emergence of collectively-designed professional development for continuous renewal of culturally responsive and inclusive cultures in all education spaces. Strategies include identifying prospective teachers within high schools, establishing peer cohorts, facilitating critical mentoring, mapping grow-your-own pipelines and pathways, providing support at crucial stages in college, developing positive cultures in programs and districts, facilitating ongoing professional development that centers marginalized perspectives, and providing logistical support for emerging networks and organic affinity groups. Lack of support, student debt, isolation, discrimination, and unwelcoming and unresponsive school environments are common barriers that require ongoing dismantling.
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