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Race-conscious professional teaching standards: Where do the states stand?

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.32.8259

Keywords:

teaching standards, InTASC, culturally responsive teaching, racial inequality, discourse analysis

Abstract

Education policymakers have long sought to reduce persistent achievement disparities between students of color and White students with varying levels of success. Understanding the different needs and obstacles faced by students and families of color is important given educating all individuals for our future U.S. society is a priority. Educational policy should reflect the assumption that race matters and continues to impact educational opportunity. This paper argues that race-conscious professional teaching standards could extend the structural boundaries of teacher practice when working with racially, culturally, and linguistically diverse students. Using discourse analysis to analyze the deeper meanings of selected states’ teaching standards in different sociopolitical contexts, this paper describes the challenges and opportunities for infusing race-conscious perspectives in teaching standards. Implications for how states’ teaching policy language actively creates and builds teaching and learning environments are discussed.

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Author Biography

Danielle M. Carrier, University of Southern Mississippi

Danielle M. Carrier is an assistant professor of elementary education in the School of Education at the University of Southern Mississippi. Her research focuses on history and politics of education related to educational policy and practice. She is currently historicizing the standards-based educational reform movement and the racialized impacts felt by one school community in the District of Columbia.

Published

2024-03-12

How to Cite

Carrier, D. M. (2024). Race-conscious professional teaching standards: Where do the states stand?. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 32. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.32.8259

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