Date of Award

8-21-2024

Document Type

Open Access Dissertation

Department

Educational Studies

First Advisor

Linda Silvernail

Abstract

This study presents an action research investigation into the lived experience of race-related stress among Black K-12 educators. The study was motivated by the recognition that Black educators working in White settings are suffering from racerelated stress. A qualitative phenomenological case study design was employed to investigate the race-related stress of five female Black K-12 educators working in White school settings across several states. I used open coding to collect data from interviews, community of practice transcripts, participant reflections, and observational field notes were analyzed. The findings of the study reveal that Black educators experience racerelated stress while working in White settings due to their childhood racial socialization, microinvalidation, and a lack of fluency about race among White colleagues. The study highlights the need for more research on race-related stress to heighten awareness of the issue and lead to further professional development. The goal is to improve the experience of race-related stress for Black educators, especially those working in White school settings.

Rights

© 2024, Tiffany A. Thompson

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