Black teachers are overwhelmed by increased responsibilities at schools, and it's making some quit the profession
Black teachers are overwhelmed by increased responsibilities at schools, and it's making some quit the profession
A fifth-grader goes over a math problem with her teacher in Detroit, Michigan, on December 9, 2021. Schools in the state instituted remote school days for Fridays to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
REUTERS/Emily Elconin
DeArbea Walker
Jan 12, 2022, 5:02 PM
The San Francisco teacher told Insider that every time he walks into the school he teaches at, he's on patrol duty as the mask enforcer.
His health and his student's health are critical, he told Insider. That's why he doesn't understand why there is a national debate — during the most infectious point of the pandemic so far — on whether students and teachers should be ushered back into the classroom.
"I feel like a lot of administration is choosing not to see it from a teacher perspective," McDougald, who teaches English and history at the Town School, told Insider. "People are still getting COVID. It was hard teaching online, but I just think it's more worth it to stay online."
While politicians and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have urged schools to stay open, arguing that the benefit of masked, vaccinated in-person learning outweighs the risk of COVID-19 spread, many teachers across the US disagree. Earlier this month, the Chicago teachers' union staged a hold out over in person learning and California Bay Area teachers hosted demonstrations, protesting a lack of COVID-19 protections for teachers.
Insider spoke to Black teachers who said the last two years have been the hardest of their careers. They've become the mask enforcers, juggled heated discussions on education curriculum, and become the on-the-job racial sensitivity educators after the murder of George Floyd.
"When this pandemic first hit, I was actually as the union rep having weekly meetings with teachers to ask 'how are you doing' because it was so overwhelming to some people," Nikita Gibbs-Nolen, a representative of the Oakland Education Association and teacher at Markham Elementary told Insider. "Some people were considering quitting. Some people were fearful of going back."
McDougald and Gibbs-Nolen said their schools don't require their students to be fully vaccinated yet but faculty are vaccinated. The Town School and Markham Elementary School didn't immediately respond to Insider's requests for comment for this story.
"I've been feeling really expendable," McDougald said.
Oakland teachers drive past the Oakland Unified School District office along Broadway Avenue in downtown Oakland Oakland, California, on Jan. 7, 2022 as part of a sickout and car caravan demonstration.
Jessica Christian/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images
During the pandemic, Black teachers have reported increased microaggressions on the job
Black teachers are overwhelmed by increased responsibilities at schools, and it's making some quit the profession
A fifth-grader goes over a math problem with her teacher in Detroit, Michigan, on December 9, 2021. Schools in the state instituted remote school days for Fridays to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
REUTERS/Emily Elconin
DeArbea Walker
Jan 12, 2022, 5:02 PM
- Black teachers told Insider their responsibilities increased more than their peers during the pandemic.
- More are turning to therapy as their safety and other concerns fall on deaf ears, they said.
- Advocacy groups said they want a federal mandate to alleviate the burden on Black teachers.
The San Francisco teacher told Insider that every time he walks into the school he teaches at, he's on patrol duty as the mask enforcer.
His health and his student's health are critical, he told Insider. That's why he doesn't understand why there is a national debate — during the most infectious point of the pandemic so far — on whether students and teachers should be ushered back into the classroom.
"I feel like a lot of administration is choosing not to see it from a teacher perspective," McDougald, who teaches English and history at the Town School, told Insider. "People are still getting COVID. It was hard teaching online, but I just think it's more worth it to stay online."
While politicians and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have urged schools to stay open, arguing that the benefit of masked, vaccinated in-person learning outweighs the risk of COVID-19 spread, many teachers across the US disagree. Earlier this month, the Chicago teachers' union staged a hold out over in person learning and California Bay Area teachers hosted demonstrations, protesting a lack of COVID-19 protections for teachers.
Insider spoke to Black teachers who said the last two years have been the hardest of their careers. They've become the mask enforcers, juggled heated discussions on education curriculum, and become the on-the-job racial sensitivity educators after the murder of George Floyd.
"When this pandemic first hit, I was actually as the union rep having weekly meetings with teachers to ask 'how are you doing' because it was so overwhelming to some people," Nikita Gibbs-Nolen, a representative of the Oakland Education Association and teacher at Markham Elementary told Insider. "Some people were considering quitting. Some people were fearful of going back."
McDougald and Gibbs-Nolen said their schools don't require their students to be fully vaccinated yet but faculty are vaccinated. The Town School and Markham Elementary School didn't immediately respond to Insider's requests for comment for this story.
"I've been feeling really expendable," McDougald said.
Oakland teachers drive past the Oakland Unified School District office along Broadway Avenue in downtown Oakland Oakland, California, on Jan. 7, 2022 as part of a sickout and car caravan demonstration.
Jessica Christian/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images
During the pandemic, Black teachers have reported increased microaggressions on the job