Publication | Closed Access
Teachers Are People Too: Examining the Racial Bias of Teachers Compared to Other American Adults
242
Citations
62
References
2020
Year
Unique SitesMulticultural EducationDiscriminationRacial PrejudiceEducationTeachers ComparedElementary EducationRaceRacial InequalityTeacher EducationAfrican American StudiesInclusive EducationRacismEthnic DiscriminationRacial EquityOther American AdultsRacialization StudiesEqual Educational OpportunityTeacher EvaluationPeople TooEducation PolicyRace Relation
Schools are heralded by some as unique sites for promoting racial equity. Central to this characterization is the presumption that teachers embrace racial equity and teaching about this topic. In contrast, others have documented the ongoing role of teachers in perpetuating racial inequality in schools. In this article, we employ data from two national data sets to investigate teachers’ explicit and implicit racial bias, comparing them to adults with similar characteristics. We find that both teachers and nonteachers hold pro-White explicit and implicit racial biases. Furthermore, differences between teachers and nonteachers were negligible or insignificant. The findings suggest that if schools are to effectively promote racial equity, teachers should be provided with training to either shift or mitigate the effects of their own racial biases.
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