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“Community Is Wherever I Am”: A Sista Circle on Othermotherwork in Teacher Education

  • Tasha Austin
  • , Dawnavyn James
  • , Teresa Leggard
  • , Rosangela Bencosme-Perez
  • , Modiegi Notoane-Eugene

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

As an exploration of potential support structures for Black women teachers, this study elicits the wisdom of Black women as othermothers who serve in an array of urban instructional settings. Using a Sista Circle Methodology as framed through Black Girl Cartographies and Radical Mothering, we found that through the dual healing processes of (re)membering and (re)fusal, these women became one another's homeplaces. Implications include a need to activate potentials of carework within communities of Black women teachers via unstructured opportunities to gather or to convene in culturally conducive spaces free from institutionally driven norms and expectations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number00420859251382191
JournalUrban Education
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Keywords

  • Black girlhood cartographies
  • black feminism
  • motherwork
  • teacher education

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