Abstract

Facilitating learning around race and racism is often uncomfortable for faculty as well as students. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to investigate the experiences of undergraduate social work educators who teach about race and racism in social work programs. I employed a qualitative case study design to understand the lived experience of undergraduate social work educators who teach race specific content. I employed a combination of purposive sampling and snowballing methods to identify nine participants from the Southeast region of the United States. Utilizing a Critical Race Theory (CRT) framework to analyze interviews, several key findings emerged revealing faculty as barriers to facilitating learning around anti-racist content in the classroom. These findings were a) their own racial identity; b) insufficient formal preparation around race and racism; c) lack of faculty comfort with anti-racist content; and d) lack of skill in teaching anti-racist content. Recommendations include the implementation of scaffolded antiracist content throughout social work curricula that would be required by the Council on Social Work Education as part of the accreditation process.

Highlights

  • Facilitating learning around race and racism is often uncomfortable for faculty as well as students

  • The intersection of race and gender are relevant within social work education due to 61.1% of social work educators identifying as White, 17.6% identifying as African American/ Other Black, and 6.8% identifying as Chicano/Puerto Rican/or Other Latino (CSWE, 2020)

  • The purpose of this qualitative case study was to investigate the experiences of undergraduate social work educators who teach about race and racism in social work programs

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Summary

Introduction

Facilitating learning around race and racism is often uncomfortable for faculty as well as students The purpose of this qualitative case study was to investigate the experiences of undergraduate social work educators who teach about race and racism in social work programs. Utilizing a Critical Race Theory (CRT) framework to analyze interviews, several key findings emerged revealing faculty as barriers to facilitating learning around anti-racist content in the classroom These findings were a) their own racial identity; b) insufficient formal preparation around race and racism; c) lack of faculty comfort with anti-racist content; and d) lack of skill in teaching anti-racist content. The result is a persistent lack of cultural relevant content in social work education

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