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Report / In Depth

Paving the Way for Latinx Teachers

Recruitment and Preparation to Promote Educator Diversity

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Abstract

This report adds a significant perspective to the current wave of efforts aimed at diversifying the teacher workforce, specifically to address the mismatch between Latinx students and Latinx teachers. The Latinx population is the largest ethnic group in America’s public schools, currently making up a quarter of the student population, and expected to grow to one-third by 2027. Research shows that schools and districts with teachers that reflect the cultural, racial, and/or linguistic backgrounds of Latinx students are better equipped to support them. This report—one of the first focused solely on pathways into teaching for Latinx individuals—explores how Latinx teachers typically enter the profession and the barriers they face along the way. This report profiles three Latinx-focused pathways into teaching that are attempting to reduce those barriers, reflects on key findings, and offers recommendations for policymakers and practitioners.

Acknowledgments

I am grateful for the participation of students, teachers, faculty, administrators, and staff from Burlington-Edison High School, Skagit Valley College, Western Washington University, Washington’s Professional Educator Standards Board, San Antonio Independent School District, Northwest Vista College, the University of Texas as San Antonio’s College of Education and Human Development, Chicago Public Schools, National Louis University’s National College of Education, and the National Center for Teacher Residencies. For a full list of individuals that informed this work, see appendix A. Thank you to those who reviewed drafts of this paper, including Janette Martinez of Excelencia for Education, Etai Mizrav of American Institutes for Research, and Lisette Partelow of Center for American Progress. I am especially grateful to my New America colleague, Amaya Garcia, the primary author of the Chicago Public Schools profile which was adapted from a larger, previously-published paper. I am also grateful to my colleagues Melissa Tooley, Elena Silva, Jenny Muñiz, Iris Palmer, and Sabrina Detlef for providing expert and editorial insight, and Sophie Nguyen for data support. Thanks to Riker Pasterkiewicz, Julie Brosnan, Tong "Echo" Wu, Maria Elkin, Samantha Webster, Naomi Morduch Toubman, and Joe Wilkes for their graphics and communication support. New America’s PreK–12 team is generously supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Heising-Simons Foundation, the Hewlett Foundation, the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, the McKnight Foundation, and the W. Clement and Jessie V. Stone Foundation. The views expressed herein represent those of the author and not necessarily the individuals or organizations named above.

More About the Authors

Roxanne Garza
Roxanne Garza
Paving the Way for Latinx Teachers

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