通往学术界之路:职业治疗教师对黑人、原住民或有色人种的看法。

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q1 REHABILITATION
Victor Camacho, LaMar Bolden
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重要性:反映被学术界招募并保留的来自代表性不足背景的教师的经历,可能会增强多样性、公平、包容、公正、可及性和归属感倡议,如管道项目、指导项目和外展活动。目的:探讨自我认同为黑人、土著或有色人种(BIPOC)的职业治疗教育者在通往学术界的道路上的经历和看法。设计:采用半结构化访谈和人口调查的现象学描述性研究。设置:学术界。参与者:一个目的样本的职业治疗教师(N = 17)在美国谁自认为是BIPOC。结果:出现了三个主题。第一部分,学术界之旅,描述了激发职业治疗事业追求的经历,然后过渡到学术界。这包含了定义时刻、参与教学的机会、影响因素以及正式和非正式指导的子主题。第二个主题,学术界之旅,捕捉了影响学术界工作满意度、工作绩效和保留的因素,以及归属感和学术文化的子主题。第三个主题,代表性在专业中的作用,描述了种族和民族代表性在通往学术界和通过学术界的道路上所经历的影响。结论和相关性:受访者描述了不同的学术文化经历。这些经验可以应用于旨在吸引更多不同观点和认识方式进入职业治疗领域的倡议。简单的语言总结:本研究的发现为自我认同为黑人、土著或有色人种(BIPOC)的职业治疗从业人员的招聘和保留的讨论增加了细微差别。尽管在战略多样性、公平性和包容性方面做出了努力,但职业治疗专业未能招募和留住反映美国人口的种族和民族多样化的从业人员:探索职业治疗多样化的证据排除了BIPOC职业治疗教师的视角。本研究探讨了激励来自代表性不足背景的教师进入该领域并引导他们在学术界工作的原因。调查结果表明,这些教育工作者的动机是希望影响该专业和更广泛的世界的变化,他们受到该领域缺乏多样化代表的影响。这些教育工作者所经历的社会、学术和经济支持增加了文化反应的细微差别,进一步使职业治疗队伍多样化。立场声明:维克多·卡马乔(他/他/她)确定为GenXer,城市居民,南美拉丁裔男性。LaMar Bolden(她/她)认为自己是一名黑人,顺性别,女性,拥有基督教精神信仰。两人都是职业治疗部门的全职教员;具有临床博士后学历;并领导和服务于系、大学和州各级各种多元化、公平和包容委员会。这项研究的起源源于他们关于美国职业治疗协会(2023)劳动力调查报告中职业治疗院士代表性不足的对话,以及他们在高等教育领域的经验。他们有意关注黑人、原住民和有色人种,以承认这种对话在美国和职业治疗行业的历史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pathway to Academia: Perceptions of Occupational Therapy Faculty Who Identify as Black, Indigenous, or People of Color.

Importance: A reflection of the experiences of faculty from underrepresented backgrounds who have been recruited into academia and retained may enhance diversity, equity, inclusion, justice, accessibility, and belonging initiatives, such as pipeline programs, mentorship programs, and outreach.

Objective: To explore the experiences and perceptions of occupational therapy educators who self-identify as Black, Indigenous, or people of color (BIPOC) as they navigated the path that led them to academia.

Design: A phenomenological descriptive study with semistructured interviews and a demographic survey.

Setting: Academia.

Participants: A purposive sample of occupational therapy faculty (N = 17) in the United States who self-identify as BIPOC.

Results: Three themes emerged. The first, the journey to academia, describes experiences that sparked the pursuit of a career in occupational therapy and then the transition to academia. This encompasses the subthemes of defining moments, opportunities to engage in teaching, influential factors, and formal and informal mentorship. The second theme, the journey through academia, captures factors that influence job satisfaction, job performance, and retention in academia, with subthemes of belonging and academic culture. The third theme, the role of representation in the profession, describes the impact of racial and ethnic representation experienced on the paths to and through academia.

Conclusions and relevance: The respondents described distinct experiences of academic culture. These experiences can be applied to initiatives intended to attract more diverse perspectives and ways of knowing into the field of occupational therapy. Plain-Language Summary: The findings of this study add nuance to the discussion of the recruitment and retention of occupational therapy practitioners who self-identify as Black, Indigenous, or people of color (BIPOC). Despite strategic diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, the profession of occupational therapy has failed to recruit and retain a racially and ethnically diverse pool of practitioners that is reflective of the U.S.

Population: The evidence that explores diversification of occupational therapy excludes the lens of BIPOC occupational therapy faculty. This study explored the reasons that inspired faculty from underrepresented backgrounds to enter the field and led them to work in academia. The findings indicate that these educators were motivated by a desire to influence change in the profession and the wider world and that they were affected by the lack of diverse representation in the field. The social, academic, and financial support experienced by these educators adds culturally responsive nuances to further diversifying the occupational therapy workforce. Positionality Statement: Victor Camacho (he/him/el) identifies as a GenXer, urban dweller, South American Latino male. LaMar Bolden (she/her) identifies as a Black, cisgender, female Xennial with Christian spiritual beliefs. Both are full-time faculty members in occupational therapy departments; hold postprofessional clinical doctorates; and lead and serve on various diversity, equity, and inclusion committees at the department, university, and state levels. The genesis of this research stemmed from their conversations about the paucity of occupational therapy academician representation reported in the American Occupational Therapy Association's (2023) workforce survey and experienced in their circles of higher education. They intentionally focus on Black, Indigenous, and people of color to acknowledge the history of this conversation in the United States and the occupational therapy profession.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
10.30%
发文量
406
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Occupational Therapy (AJOT) is an official publication of the American Occupational Therapy Association, Inc. and is published 6 times per year. This peer reviewed journal focuses on research, practice, and health care issues in the field of occupational therapy. AOTA members receive 6 issues of AJOT per year and have online access to archived abstracts and full-text articles. Nonmembers may view abstracts online but must purchase full-text articles.
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