San Francisco Chronicle

Schools struggle to recruit Black teachers

State has launched initiative­s to recruit educators of color

- By Diana Lambert Diana Lambert is based in Sacramento and writes about teachers and teaching in California for EdSource, where this story first appeared. Email: dlambert@edsource.org; X: @dianalambe­rt.

Recruiting and retaining Black teachers has taken on new urgency in recent years as California lawmakers try to ease the state’s teacher shortage. The state and individual school districts have launched initiative­s to recruit teachers of color, but educators and advocates say more needs to be done.

Hiring a diverse group of teachers helps all students, but the impact is particular­ly significan­t for students of color, who then score higher on tests and are more likely to graduate from college, according to the Learning Policy Institute. A recently released report also found that Black boys are less likely to be identified for special education when they have a Black teacher.

In the past five years, state lawmakers have made earning a credential easier and more affordable, and have offered incentives for school staff to become teachers — all moves meant to ease the teacher shortage and help to diversify the educator workforce.

Despite efforts by the state and school districts, the number of Black teachers doesn’t seem to be increasing. Black teachers say that to keep them in the classroom, teacher preparatio­n must be more affordable, pay and benefits increased, and more done to ensure they are treated with respect, supported and given opportunit­ies to lead.

“Black educators specifical­ly said that they felt like they were being pushed out of the state of California,” said Jalisa Evans, chief executive director of the Black Educator Advocates Network, of a recent survey of Black teachers. “When we look at the future of Black educators for the state, it can go either way, because what Black educators are feeling right now is that they’re not welcome.”

Task force’s advice

State Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond called diversifyi­ng the teacher workforce a priority and establishe­d the California Department of Education Educator Diversity Advisory Group in 2021.

The advisory group has made several recommenda­tions, including beginning a public relations campaign and offering sustained funding to recruit and retain teachers of color, and providing guidance and accountabi­lity to school districts on the matter. The group also wants universiti­es, community groups and school districts to enter into partnershi­ps to build pathways for teachers of color.

Since then, California has created a set of public service announceme­nts and a video to help recruit teachers and has invested $10 million to help people of color to become school administra­tors, said Travis Bristol, chairman of the advisory group and an associate professor of education at UC Berkeley. Staff from county offices of education also have been meeting to share ideas on how they can support districts’ efforts to recruit and retain teachers of color, he said.

The state also has invested more than $350 million over the past six years to fund teacher residency programs, and recently passed legislatio­n to ensure residents are paid a minimum salary. Residents work alongside an experience­d teacher-mentor for a year of clinical training while completing coursework in a university preparatio­n program — a time commitment that often precludes them from taking a job.

Legislator­s have also proposed a bill that would require

student teachers be paid. Completing the 600 hours of unpaid student teaching required by the state, while paying for tuition, books, supplies and living expenses, is a challenge for many Black teacher candidates.

Black teacher candidates typically take on much more student debt than their white counterpar­ts, in part, because of the large racial wealth gap in the United States. A 2019 study by the Economic Policy Institute showed that the median white family had $184,000 in family wealth (property and cash), while the median Latino family had $38,000 and the median Black family had $23,000.

Lack of data

It’s difficult to know if state efforts are working. California hasn’t released any data on teacher demographi­cs since the 2018-19 school year, although the data is submitted annually by school districts. The California Department of Education did not provide updated data or interviews requested by EdSource for this story.

The most recent data from the Education Department shows the number of Black teachers in California declined from 4.2% in 2009 to 3.9% during the 2018-19 school year. The National Center for Education Statistics data from the 2020-21 shows that Black teachers made up 3.8% of the state educator workforce.

Having current data is a critical first step to understand­ing the problem and addressing it, said Mayra Lara, director of Southern California partnershi­ps and engagement at The Education Trust-West, an education research and advocacy organizati­on.

“Let’s be clear: The California Department of Education needs to annually publish educator demographi­c and experience data,” Lara said. “It has failed to do so for the past four years. … Without this data, families, communitie­s and decision-makers really are in the dark when it comes to the diversity of the educator workforce.”

L.A. Unified’s efforts

While most state programs focus on recruiting and retaining all teachers of color, some California school districts have initiative­s focused solely on recruiting Black teachers.

The state’s largest school district, Los Angeles Unified, passed the Black Student Excellence through Educator Diversity, Preparatio­n and Retention resolution two years ago. It required district staff to develop a strategic plan to ensure schools have Black teachers, administra­tors and mental health workers, and to advocate for programs that offer pathways for Black people to become teachers.

When the resolution was

in February 2022, Los Angeles Unified had 1,889 Black teachers — 9% of its teacher workforce. The following school year, that number declined to 1,823 or 7.9% of district teachers. The number of Black teachers in the district has gone down each year since 2016. The district did not provide data for the current school year.

Robert Whitman, director of the Educationa­l Transforma­tion Office at L.A. Unified, attributed the decrease, in part, to the difficulty attracting teachers to the district, primarily because of the area’s high cost of living.

“Those who are coming out of colleges now, in some cases, we find that they can make more money doing other things,” Whitman said. “And so, they may not necessaril­y see education as the most viable option.”

The underrepre­sentation of people of color prompted the district to create its own inhouse credential­ing program, approved by the California Commission on Teacher Credential­ing, Whitman said. The program allows classified staff, such as substitute teachers, paraprofes­sionals, administra­tive assistants and bus drivers, to become credential­ed teachers while earning a salary and benefits at their original jobs.

Grow-your-own programs such as this, and the state’s Classified School Employee Credential­ing program, and a soon-tobe launched apprentice­ship program, are meant to diversify the educator workforce because school staff recruited from the community more closely match the demographi­cs of the student body than traditiona­lly trained and recruited teachers, according to research.

Los Angeles Unified has other initiative­s to increase the number of Black educators in the district, Whitman said, including working with universiti­es and colleges to bring Black teachers, counselors and psychiatri­c social workers to their campuses. The district also has programs that help school workers earn a credential for free, and channels employees completing a bachelor’s degree toward the district’s teacher preparatio­n program where they can begin teaching while earning their credential.

All new teachers at Los Angeles Unified are supported by mentors and affinity groups, which have been well received by Black teachers, who credit them with inspiring and helping them to see themselves as leaders in the district, Whitman said.

Oakland’s numbers

Recruiting and retaining Black teachers is an important part of the Oakland Unified three-year strategic plan, said Sarah Glasband, director of rethat

cruitment and retention for the district. To achieve its goals, the district has launched several partnershi­ps that make an apprentice­ship program, and a residency program that includes a housing subsidy, possible. A partnershi­p with the Black Teacher Project, a nonprofit advocacy organizati­on, offers affinity groups, workshops and seminars to support the district’s Black teachers.

The district also has a Classified School Employee Program funded by the state and a new high school program to train future teachers. District pathway programs have an average attrition rate of less than 10%, Glasband said.

This year, 21.3% of the district’s K-12 teachers are Black, compared with 20.3% of their student population, according to district data. Oakland Unified had a retention rate of about 85% for Black teachers between 2019 and 2023.

The game plan

Black teachers interviewe­d by EdSource and researcher­s say that to keep them in the classroom, more needs to be done to make teacher preparatio­n affordable, improve pay and benefits, and ensure they are treated with respect, supported and given opportunit­ies to lead.

The Black Educator Advocates Network came up with five recommenda­tions after surveying 128 former and current Black teachers in California about what it would take to keep them in the classroom:

• Hire more Black educators and staff

• Build an anti-racist, culturally responsive and inclusive school environmen­t

• Create safe spaces for Black educators and students to come together

• Provide and require culturally responsive training for all staff

• Recognize, provide leadership opportunit­ies and include Black educators in decision making

Teachers interviewe­d by EdSource said paying teachers more also would make it easier for them to stay.

“I don’t want to say that it’s the pay that’s going to get more Black teachers,” Brooke Sims, a Stockton teacher, told EdSource. “But you get better pay, you get better health care.”

The average teacher salary in the state is $88,508, with the average starting pay at $51,600, according to the 2023 National Education Associatio­n report, “State of Educator Pay in America.” California’s minimum living wage was $54,070 last year, according to the report.

State efforts, such as an initiative that pays teachers $5,000 annually for five years after they earn National Board Certificap­assed tion, will help with pay parity across school districts, Bristol said. Teachers prove through assessment­s and a portfolio that they meet the National Board for Profession­al Teaching Standards. To be eligible for the grant, teachers must work at least half of their time in a highneeds school. Teachers who qualify are also given $2,500 to cover the cost of certificat­ion.

This incentive will help teachers continue their education and improve their practice, said Los Angeles teacher Petrina Miller. “It’s awesome,” she said.

Recruiting efforts

Many Black college students have not considered a teaching career because they have never had a Black teacher, said Preston Jackson, who teaches physical education at California Middle School in Sacramento. Those who consider a teaching career are often deterred by the cost of teacher preparatio­n, taking required tests and unpaid student teaching.

“In order to increase the number of Black teachers in schools, it has to become deliberate,” Jackson said. “You have to actively recruit and actively seek them out to bring them into the profession.”

Since starting in 2005, Jackson has been one of only a handful of Black teachers at his school.

“And for almost every single one of my kids, I’m the first Black teacher they’ve ever had,” said Jackson. “And for some of them, I’m the first one they’ve ever seen.”

Mentors needed

Mentor teachers are the key ingredient to helping new Black educators transition successful­ly into teaching, according to teachers interviewe­d by EdSource. Alicia Simba said she could have taken a job for $25,000 more annually in a Bay Area district with few Black teachers or students, but opted to take a lower salary to work in Oakland Unified.

But like many young teachers, Simba knew she wanted mentors to help her navigate her first years in the classroom. She works alongside Black teachers in Oakland Unified who have more than 20 years of teaching experience. One of her mentor teachers shared her experience of teaching on the day that Martin Luther King Jr. was shot. Other teachers told her about teaching in the 1980s during the crack cocaine epidemic.

“It really helps dispel some of the sort of narratives that I hear, which is that being a teacher is completely unsustaina­ble,” Simba said. “Like, there’s no way that anyone could ever be a teacher long term, which are things that, you know, I’ve heard my friends say, and I’ve thought it myself.”

The most obvious way to retain Black teachers would be to make sure they are treated the same as non-Black teachers, said Brenda Walker, a Black teacher and president of the Associated Chino Teachers.

“If you are a district administra­tor, site administra­tor, site or colleague, parent or student, my bachelor’s degree, master’s degree, and my special education credential are just as valuable and carry as much weight, and are as respected as any other educator,” she said.

“However, it’s just as critical for all those groups to acknowledg­e and respect the unique cultural experience I bring to the table and acknowledg­e and respect that I’m a proud product of my ancestral history.”

 ?? Monkey Business Images/Shuttersto­ck ?? Recruiting and retaining Black teachers has taken on new urgency in recent years as California lawmakers try to ease the state’s teacher shortage and close gaps in student performanc­e.
Monkey Business Images/Shuttersto­ck Recruiting and retaining Black teachers has taken on new urgency in recent years as California lawmakers try to ease the state’s teacher shortage and close gaps in student performanc­e.

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