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Teacher candidates of Color experiences and perceptions of culturally responsive teaching within teacher education: “they hit the target, not the bullseye”

Oscar Navarro (College of Education, California State University, Long Beach, California, USA)
Briana Ronan (School of Education, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California, USA)
Ingrid Reyes Patron (School of Education, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California, USA)

Journal for Multicultural Education

ISSN: 2053-535X

Article publication date: 25 April 2022

Issue publication date: 20 September 2022

347

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to examine how teacher candidates of Color (TCoCs) experienced and perceived culturally responsive teaching across three teacher education programs at a predominately White institution in the USA. At the time of the study, the campus was reeling from a series of racist incidents on- and off-campus, and the teacher education programs were attempting to recruit more TCoCs.

Design/methodology/approach

Drawing on a critical race theory counternarrative approach and qualitative research focus-group interviews, the authors centered the voices of seven TCoCs and their experiences with culturally responsive teaching in their coursework.

Findings

The TCoCs experienced and perceived culturally responsive teaching as promising yet fleeting, missing the mark, and a misuse of culture and language that resulted in harm. The TCoCs urge teacher education to hire racially–ethnically–linguistically diverse faculty, provide affirming spaces for TCoCs, and curricular transformation.

Originality/value

Study findings contribute to recent calls for teacher education programs to attend to the lived experiences, concerns and expectations of future teachers of color.

Keywords

Citation

Navarro, O., Ronan, B. and Reyes Patron, I. (2022), "Teacher candidates of Color experiences and perceptions of culturally responsive teaching within teacher education: “they hit the target, not the bullseye”", Journal for Multicultural Education, Vol. 16 No. 4, pp. 374-386. https://doi.org/10.1108/JME-01-2022-0007

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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