Disparities in Teachers’ Access to Schools’ Collective Social Assets Based on Role, Race, and Poverty

A schools’ collective social assets (i.e., school culture, administrative support, and satisfied colleagues) are especially important for beginning teachers at higher risk of attrition, including special educators, teachers of color, teachers in high-poverty schools, and teachers in schools serving...

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Veröffentlicht in:Remedial and special education 2023-02, Vol.44 (1), p.3-15
Hauptverfasser: Mason-Williams, Loretta, Bettini, Elizabeth, Morris Mathews, Hannah, Boveda, Mildred, Rodgers, Wendy
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container_end_page 15
container_issue 1
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container_title Remedial and special education
container_volume 44
creator Mason-Williams, Loretta
Bettini, Elizabeth
Morris Mathews, Hannah
Boveda, Mildred
Rodgers, Wendy
description A schools’ collective social assets (i.e., school culture, administrative support, and satisfied colleagues) are especially important for beginning teachers at higher risk of attrition, including special educators, teachers of color, teachers in high-poverty schools, and teachers in schools serving predominantly students of color. These teachers often report experiencing less social support than general educators, White teachers, teachers in low-poverty schools, and teachers serving predominantly White students, respectively; we labeled this inequitable access to schools’ collective social assets intersectional professional vulnerability. Using data from the Schools and Staffing Survey and structural equation modeling, we examined how beginning teachers’ race/ethnicity and their students’ race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and disability status related to perceptions of their U.S. schools’ collective social assets and how those perceptions shaped intent to continue teaching. We found significant differences in access to collective social assets based on their race/ethnicity, role as special versus general educators, and students served within their school.
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subjects Attrition
Beginning Teachers
Elementary Secondary Education
Equal Education
Ethnicity
Intersectionality
Job Satisfaction
Minority Group Teachers
National Surveys
Perceptions
Poverty
Race
Racism
School Culture
School environment
Schools
Social support
Social Support Groups
Socioeconomic Status
Socioeconomics
Special Education
Special Education Teachers
Structural Equation Models
Students
Students with disabilities
Teacher Background
Teacher Characteristics
Teacher Persistence
Teachers
Teaching
White Students
title Disparities in Teachers’ Access to Schools’ Collective Social Assets Based on Role, Race, and Poverty
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