EdSource
Petrina Miller remembers, as a young teacher in Los Angeles Unified, helping another teacher during district testing and noticing that the teacher was giving Black students and other students of color the answers. Miller asked her why she was doing that.
โLet them have a productive struggle,โ Miller said. โLet them try, and whatever score they get is what they get. And thatโs fine.โ
The teacher said, โPoor little babies, they donโt know any better,โ in a way that made Miller uncomfortable. On another day, the same teacher used a racist term to refer to Miller, who is Black.
The incidents were reported to the principal, but the teacher continued to work at the school. Miller isnโt sure if she was ever disciplined.
California and other states have been trying to recruit and retain Black teachers for years, but the numbers arenโt improving. Among the factors impeding this goal, along with the cost of teacher preparation, is a lack of support and respect for Black teachers once they are in the classroom, according to teachers.
โBlack teachers leave the profession because they donโt feel supported for what they are able to bring to the table in terms of their unique experiences, and they leave because of the fact that they are not seen as equal to their colleagues,โ said Brenda Walker, a Black teacher who is president of Associated Chino Teachers.
In the 2020-21 school year, the most recent data available, 3.8% of all teachers in California were Black, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Black students made up 5.2% of the stateโs student population that year, according to the California Department of Education.
Number of Black teachers declining nationwide
The state is doing better than the nation as a whole. Just over 6% of U.S. teachers were Black in the 2021-21 school year; 1.3% of U.S. teachers were Black men. Black students made up 15% of the students that year. The number of Black teachers in the U.S. has been declining for years.
A growing body of research shows that having a teacher of color in the classroom is important to students of color, resulting in higher test scores and a greater likelihood of graduating from college. Research also shows that having Black teachers in the classroom has a positive impact on all students, regardless of their race, said Travis Bristol, an associate professor of education at UC Berkeley, who has done extensive research on the topic.
โThe framing, I think historically, has been that Black teachers are just good for Black students,โ Bristol said. โAnd while that is true, it is also true that Black teachers are lowering the suspension rates of students who are not Black.โ
Roadblocks to teaching begin early
The first hurdle for potential Black teachers comes early, while they are still students in K-12 schools, Bristol said.
โWe suspend and expel a disproportionate number of Black children,โ he said. โThere is evidence, thereโs research that if you are suspended and expelled, it decreases the likelihood that you then move on to pursue a higher education.โ
The cost of teacher preparation is a major roadblock to a credential. Tuition, the cost of required tests and unpaid student teaching have kept many Black people out of the profession, according to teachers interviewed by EdSource.
Black teachers owe an average of $43,000 more in college debt than white graduates 12 years after graduation, according to the Learning Policy Institute, a nonprofit education research organization. The low salary of new teachers and the high amount of college debt associated with five years of college can dissuade Black people from becoming teachers. Many also arenโt financially able to quit their jobs to complete the 600 hours of unpaid student teaching required to complete a credential.
Brooke Sims, a first-grade teacher in Stockton, who also serves as a mentor teacher, says sheโs still struggling to repay student loans after 16 years of teaching.
โI definitely believe free classes, free courses or free programs โฆ would help recruit and retain more teachers,โ she said.
Lack of funds pushes Black teachers into internships
To help pay the bills, many Black teachers take an internship instead of the traditional route to a credential, which includes student teaching with a mentor teacher. Interns work as full-time teachers while undergoing teacher preparation. They are paid, but they are put into classrooms with little preparation during the first few years of teaching.
โThey hire you on Friday, you are in a classroom on Monday,โ said Miller, who started her career with LA Unified as an intern 26 years ago. โYou have maybe a week. It felt that quick. Along the way, you went to teach, went to training and learned on the job.โ
A lack of mentors meant Miller met with the one appointed by the program about once every three months. Later, a traveling mentor was hired by the program and visited the school monthly, but primarily to drop off materials, she said.
โAs a teacher of color, it was a struggle,โ Miller said. โI had to try to find my own support from someone else.โ
Turnover rates in Kโ12 schools for teachers of color are higher than their white counterparts. In 2022 the turnover rate for Black teachers was 22%. The turnover rate for white teachers is 15%, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Black teachers interviewed for the 2023 State of the American Teacher Survey reported significantly higher rates of burnout than white teachers and were more likely to report low salaries as a source of stress.
Teachers sometimes feel undervalued, disrespected
Teachers interviewed by EdSource said their work has been scrutinized more closely than their peers, and they have felt disrespected or undervalued because they are Black.
โWhat we know is that, because Black teachers are positioned, in particular Black men teachers, are positioned as enforcers first and teacher second, that theyโre not always viewed by their white colleagues as having expertise as it relates to teaching and learning,โ Bristol said.
Krystle Goff, a targeted student population coordinator at 122nd Street Elementary in Los Angeles, says Black teachers are under pressure to be perfect. They feel they have to continually prove themselves to administrators and other teachers. Black teachers arenโt given the same grace as their counterparts, she said.
โIt feels like weโre coming up short. It feels like weโre not meeting the criteria, and so, we exit the field altogether,โ said Goff, who is responsible for the redesignation of English learners at the school.
The heightened scrutiny and lack of support of Black teachers comes from colleagues of all races, including fellow Black teachers and administrators, Goff said.
โI think that because we work for a system that sort of perpetuates that cycle of power and just white supremacy, we donโt know how to support (one another), Goff said. โฆ โYou donโt even realize that how youโre interacting with each other is just not productive.โ
Black teachers say they sometimes feel dismissed by people who question whether they are teachers while they are carrying out their duties.
โIโve shown up to field trips where I was the teacher that had arranged the field trip, and Iโve got my backpack on,โ Sims said. โIโve got a badge on with keys. I have a T-shirt that matches the childrenโs T-shirt that says I belong to this school. And Iโm like, โHi, Iโm Ms. Sims. I called. Weโre here for our field trip.โ โWell, (they ask). โAre you the teacherโ?โ
โWeโre automatically, a lot of times, dismissed, or itโs assumed that weโre not the teacher,โ said Preston Jackson, a physical education teacher at California Middle School in Sacramento. โ(They assume) weโre the campus monitor, or weโre the custodian. So right off the bat, youโre having to fight that type of bias that is still out there because there arenโt that many Black teachers.โ
Being a teacher is hard, but being a Black teacher is harder, Jackson said.
โNinety percent you probably are going to be on a site where youโre the only one there,โ Jackson said. โAnd so, youโre not going to have someone there that has gone through a similar process, because being a Black teacher is a completely different situation.โ
Inadequate support, feelings of isolation
A recent survey of 128 former and current Black teachers by the Black Educator Advocates Network titled โWhat Schools must Do to Retain Black Educators,โ found that these teachers face challenges in expressing their cultural identity, ranging from discomfort with colleaguesโ comments, to a lack of support in addressing racism within their schools. Some teachers mentioned feeling isolated or encountering resistance when discussing anti-Blackness or organizing cultural events.
โJust as all students benefit from the experience of having classroom teachers from diverse backgrounds, school districts benefit from educators who bring their expansive experiences of many cultures to their school communities,โ Chino Valleyโs Walker told EdSource. โBut, showing up as our true and authentic selves is not always understood and appreciated. School districts should make implicit bias training mandatory for all employees, not just once, but on an annual basis.โ
Sims agrees that implicit bias training is important, but she remembers attending a training session that left her feeling uncomfortable and angry. She remembers a discussion about students who couldnโt afford to buy clothes that complied with the schoolโs dress code. One teacher at the training said: โThese kidsโ canโt come to school prepared, but they come to school with brand-new Jordans, Sims said.
โWell, I know what that coded language means when youโre talking about children wearing Jordans,โ Sims said. โI know youโre talking about Black children. Obviously, everybody wears Jordans. But that was the time that I got really heated. And I said to myself, โBrooke, walk out the room, get some air because part of you wants to correct that person.โ And I probably should have.โ
Since that incident, Sims has become part of her unionโs executive board and has taken training from the California Teachers Association on how to deal with racist comments and microaggression.
โIโm just learning to be OK to do that at 41 years old,โ she said.
Cultural brokering often expected
Black teachers say they are often saddled with extra responsibilities, including serving as liaisons to Black families and disciplining Black students because of their race.
More than half of the respondents to the Black Educator Advocates Network survey said that because of their race, they are expected to educate others about racism and are expected to lead professional development sessions, teach classes on Black identity and address racism in various ways at their schools.
Collectively, the experiences of Black educators, coupled with being tasked with working with Black families disproportionately impacted by the pandemic, have left Black teachers exhausted, Alicia Simba, a transitional kindergarten teacher in Oakland Unified, told EdSource.
โItโs difficult when kids are carrying so much and parents are carrying so much, and wanting to be there to help them can be physically exhausting, as well as emotionally exhausting,โ Simba said. โI think a lot of conversation around (teacher) burnout comes from that.โ
Black teachers may feel they have to leave the profession to preserve their emotional well-being, even if they love the kids and the community and love to teach, Simba said, adding that teachers who work in schools with a large population of Black students also put in extra work because those schools are usually under-resourced.
โIโm working longer hours because we donโt have the cleaning staff that other schools might have, or a regular custodian like other schools might have,โ Simba said. โSo, Iโm spending extra time having to clean up, or maybe Iโm spending extra money on getting books for the kids because our budget isnโt as big as other schools or, with other schools, they might fundraise.โ
Black teachers: how to recruit THEM and make them stay

This is the first part of a special series by EdSource on the recruitment and retention of Black teachers in California. The recruitment and hiring of Black educators has lagged, even as a teacher shortage has given the task new urgency.
