This article explores working conditions in charter schools with varying rates of teacher turnover. Ethnographic data with 28 racially diverse teachers explores teachers’ experiences, their explanations for moving charter schools, and patterns of movement when teachers leave a charter school for another school. A brief conceptual framework was used to understand multiple dimensions of working conditions in charter schools for teachers of color. Findings indicate teachers most often made structural moves between charter types, primarily from charters managed by nonprofit organizations to standalone charter schools. Teachers of color describe tensions with sociocultural conditions that limited culturally inclusive practices. Discussion includes implications for policies that push to replicate charter schools in communities of color, particularly schools with poor working conditions associated with high turnover and weak propensities to retain teachers of color.
CITATION STYLE
White, T. (2018). Teachers of Color and Urban Charter Schools: Race, School Culture, and Teacher Turnover in the Charter Sector. Journal of Transformative Leadership & Policy Studies, 7(1), 27–42. https://doi.org/10.36851/jtlps.v7i1.496
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