Charter-ing a Different Course: A Critical Policy Framework to Support Black Women in Marketized Cities and Schools

This article features interview excerpts from 10 Black women who worked as educators in marketized cities and schools, including urban charter schools operated by charter management organizations, and independent schools, known as standalone charter schools. Using a critical race policy framework, t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theory into practice 2020-10, Vol.59 (4), p.358-369
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description This article features interview excerpts from 10 Black women who worked as educators in marketized cities and schools, including urban charter schools operated by charter management organizations, and independent schools, known as standalone charter schools. Using a critical race policy framework, the article considers the pedagogical implications of race, gender, and power embedded in market policies and which shaped the women's experiences in their schools. Key dilemmas for the women included: limited resources in district schools, lack of autonomy in privately managed charter schools, and difficulties enacting critical and culturally inclusive pedagogy in market settings premised on individual competition and test score production. As several of the women left their charter schools, or the profession altogether, their experiences map onto larger concerns with Black teacher turnover and decline in urban districts embracing marketization of public schools. The article ends with three broad strategies to support Black women in market settings.
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subjects African American Teachers
African Americans
Charter Schools
Commercialization
Competition
Critical Theory
Culturally Relevant Education
Educational Resources
Females
Gender Bias
Labor Turnover
Power Structure
Professional Autonomy
Public Schools
Race
Racial Bias
Schools
Scores
Teachers
Teaching Conditions
Teaching Experience
Tests
Urban Schools
Women
Women Faculty
title Charter-ing a Different Course: A Critical Policy Framework to Support Black Women in Marketized Cities and Schools
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