Credentials, Perpetual “Foreignness”, and Feeling out of Place: Three Stories of Resilience from Teachers of Refugee Background
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Literature Review
3. Theoretical Framework and Methods
4. Data Collection and Analysis
4.1. Narrative Profiles
4.2. Youra
4.3. Muhammad
4.4. Gül
5. Findings and Discussion
5.1. Barriers to Credentialing: “I Was so Stressed by the Work. I Don’t Know the System. I Don’t Know What’s Happening.”
5.1.1. Youra
When we were done, she was like “Your English is better than mine and you should become a teacher.”I was like “You know what?”She was like “What?”I was like “This is my plan, but I don’t have the tools yet to become a teacher.”Then, she said, “I will help you.” So, she started communicating with [the local] community college.
After I was done for my teaching credential, this idea of “okay, everybody have Masters, everybody I’m sitting with here, they have masters and I know, I have the knowledge. Sometimes, I have more knowledge than them. Why don’t I have a master’s degree?” So this idea was kept standing on my head until one day I decided, “okay, I’m gonna go get my master’s degree.”
So nobody helped me financially. I had to pay out of pocket. I didn’t know [if] there was any scholarships or anything but I asked and they said no. So I assumed that there are no scholarships. I did my master’s in art education and I just graduated.
There is a lot of requirements here from the teacher, teachers are required to do a lot of things. They need to plan before they come to class,. You need to prepare all these worksheets. I know some teachers, they have these websites, like if you’re a social studies teacher, science teacher, ELA, teacher, ELD teacher, math teacher—you have this curriculum made by the government or the state and all you have to do is just follow it. There’s a lot of resources for it. But let’s talk about art and let’s talk about foreign language. Arabic had no resources whatsoever and art has very minimum resources.
I created my own curriculum, because I started my master’s degree later in art education here in the United States. And then one of the classes was curriculum development, and I developed my own curriculum map, and all the topics, it was like very detailed. I started sharing my stuff with any art teacher I find that need help. A lot of people helped me when I was a new teacher, helped me with strategies, classroom management, how to manage this, how to do this, you know, I was asking a lot of questions. But nobody helped me with the curriculum, I had to do with myself. And I learned the hard way.
5.1.2. Gül
I’m [an] asylum seeker, but I’m not yet a citizen or green card holder. That’s why I faced a lot of difficulties. I found a job but I couldn’t keep it because I’m not a citizen or green card holder. Wherever I found a position, I just try to make it my own job. [For] maybe more than two years, I was [a] substitute teacher, but now I’m teaching in [local charter school].
The concerns related to credentialing that were discussed by Youra and Gül were not as big an issue for Muhammad. He came to the U.S. in his youth and was always engaged in educational programs. However, being taken seriously as a professional was very much a concern for him.
5.2. Devaluation of Knowledge from Outside of the U.S.: “They Think That I, Like, I Didn’t Even Live in House...The Picture They Have, It Resembles the Expectations They Have.”
5.2.1. Muhammad
Students were engaged and at the end of the class she apologized to me actually. I think the expectation most of those people have is I’m from Africa, I’m refugee. They think that I, like, I didn’t even live in house. You know what I mean? Like I live in, in like, under a tree or on a tree and drink from a well. You know, something like that. That’s the picture they have. Yeah, so picture they have then resembles the expectations they have.
She was trying to explain it [a grammatical concept] and trying to get them to practice and she was failing to do that. I could do this. I could do it. She saw me and she said, “I want you want to try,” and I said, “yeah, of course,” and then I got up, I explained it, and basically what she was failing to do was to get them engaged in the class. She wasn’t able to do that.I respected that woman a lot because she went immediately to the director and because we had a session, I told her I taught for several years in Sudan was an ESL [teacher] with a diploma in TOEFL. She went to the director and said to her, “I suggest, I will be the co-teacher and Muhammad [pseudonym] will be the main teacher.” Then I started [as the main teacher] and she started like, watching me. So it works after they start with this low expectation but then when they discover that they’re wrong, they give you the respect, they give you the place you deserve.
I didn’t do this well, because I actually didn’t care enough. I didn’t preview the reading and I was mad that she didn’t, you know, think that, oh, it could be like, some other thing, not just because I’m not a native speaker of English or because you are, you know, [a] poor person who needs help. This, the school environment, you know, [and] the work environment is similar or in organizations. Until you prove [yourself], you need to really work hard, and to show it, you know, and before that, you can be misjudged because of who you are.
5.2.2. Youra
So I was a teacher and I had a bachelor’s degree, I had 10 years of experience in teaching, so I couldn’t see myself working [in] something else. But then when I came here, I was shocked. Because here, if you go apply for a job, they’re going to ask you for history. I mean, when you go to another country, you’re completely starting over.
5.2.3. Gül
They can understand I’m not American, I’m an immigrant. That’s why I face some difficulties. When I was a substitute teacher, even some schools didn’t want to work with me when they see me. They said we have our own substitutes or you can go [to] another school.
[At] one of the schools, even with ID, one of the teachers said, “Why you are here? We don’t accept parents.” I said, “Look at my ID. I’m a teacher.” So sometimes because of my appearance, some obstacles come.
Interviewer: Do you feel like, by people who are born here and raised here, okay, I’m gonna say American, but, you know, that means a lot of things, Do you feel like you are taken seriously as a teacher? Like when you said that to that teacher? Like, look at my ID, I’m a teacher too. Do you think you were taken seriously?Gül: I’m not very sure because some of them said, “What are you teaching?” I said, “I studied history and teach Turkish language.” [They replied] “It makes sense.” But what is that? “It makes sense.” It means I’m a teacher, I am in education. I’m not very sure what is [meant by] that. Maybe they are thinking, “Yeah, you can teach but you are just a foreign language teacher.”
When I was in Turkey, I was a student. I was always out of Turkey, a teacher. My identity kind of disappeared or my stage [status] became lower. It wasn’t like before but still I’m thankful I’m here. We are safe, but nothing like before.
5.3. A Lack of Confidence: “I Feel Like When I Was in Another Country, I Was in [the] First Position. For Example, Here [I Am in the] Second or Third Position...I Lost My Power.”
5.3.1. Youra
So there were two things that stressed me, one was language and the other one was knowing the system. With language, I was comforting myself, “I know most people here, they either know one language or two languages but I already came knowing two languages and then I was learning English.”
5.3.2. Gül
My identity and my position was always higher and [of a] good position. But here, I’m in second level. I mean, I’m not citizen, I’m not green cardholder. My education [is] not from here—from Turkey. It was not enough for feeling confident here. I feel like, I’m like, when I was in other country in first position [higher status], for example, here, second or third position. I mean, maybe I feel like this—I lost my power.
5.3.3. Muhammad
I still see, you know, members of my community who have been living here for 25 years, and they still come to you to read mail for them, for example, or to go with them to an office to interpret or just to explain and sometimes it could be a very simple thing. Just last week, someone called me from Little Caesars. He wanted to order something and he was struggling to place an order. I was lucky enough to not have this rocky kind of experience. My experience has been much better than others. It was easy for me in the beginning to get a job because of my education background, and my language background. It was easy for me to get a job. It wasn’t as easy in the job though.
5.4. Connection: “I’ve Been in Their Shoes Once and I Know How—What [a] Difference It Makes When You Are Educated and Not Educated.”
I just take my identity when I, when I’m with students, and I put it away, like to the side, so I can be fair with them. I know the slightest thing you say sometimes there represents your culture or your religion, your personality is going to affect students negatively. Because I experienced it in college. But here, I’m nobody. That’s how I, I talked to my students. I’m nobody. I have no background, unless they asked me sometimes where you’re from, what is your background? I tell them, but when I’m teaching, when I’m dealing with them, when I’m, when I’m managing the classroom, I’m so fair. I don’t put my religion in the middle. I don’t put my politics in the middle. I don’t put nothing—only the work, the learning.
When I was in high school [and] in university, I was very open minded. I was not putting people in categories. I was approaching them as a human. I graduated in 2001. There was a position for me and my professor said that [I should] stay in university, like do research. But I said, no I will go out of Turkey. I will see other people how they are living, how is their culture. I want to see them. I didn’t know where. Then I start from Africa and then I came here from east to west. So it is not only related to education, I think I was always open minded.
We try to see what their interests are and familiarize them with, you know, there is [local university] here. You know, this is something you can do. I’ve been to [local university] and now I’m a student here and we [have] visited different areas at the [local university].
I always felt I’m more passionate because of my background as a refugee. I’ve always targeted to be mainly a teacher and a role model for this particular community and even chose to do my research on educational strategies. Because as a teacher, you know, there can be many teachers who can teach just regular subjects, math, science, whatever, English, but, I think my, my role as a teacher and as an education coordinator now or in the education for the refugee students, somehow is, you know, is unique, it’s not, not anyone can take my role and do the same thing I’m doing. I have more passion. I understand. I have more understanding for the population and for the effects of education. I’ve been trying to pass my experience and try to help them avoid any things that I encountered that have affected my mind negatively so I’m trying to reflect on you know, so yeah, so I think my identity as a former refugee affects my role and position as a teacher.
6. Conclusions
7. Implications for Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Adichie, Chimamanda Ngozi. 2009. The Danger of a Single Story [Video]. TED Conferences. Available online: https://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_ngozi_adichie_the_danger_of_a_single_story (accessed on 1 April 2024).
- Baumeister, Roy F., and Mark R. Leary. 1995. The need to belong: Desire for interpersonal attachments as a fundamental human emotion. Psychological Bulletin 117: 497–529. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Becker, Howard S. 1963. Outsiders; Studies in the Sociology of Deviance. London: Free Press of Glencoe. [Google Scholar]
- Beynon, June, Roumiana Ilieva, and Marela Dichupa. 2004. Re-credentialling Experiences of Immigrant Teachers: Negotiating Institutional Structures, Professional Identities and Pedagogy. Teachers and Teaching 10: 429–44. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Block, David. 2017. Social Class in Migration, Identity, and Language Research. In The Routledge Handbook of Language and Migration. Edited by Suresh Canagarajah. New York: Routledge, pp. 133–48. [Google Scholar]
- Boser, Ulrich. 2011. Teacher Diversity Matters: A State-by-State Analysis of Teachers of Color. Washington, DC: Center for American Progress. [Google Scholar]
- Boser, Ulrich. 2014. Teacher Diversity Revisited: A New State-by-State Analysis. Washington, DC: Center for American Progress. [Google Scholar]
- Carrillo, Juan F. 2010. Teaching that breaks your heart: Reflections on the soul wounds or a first-year Latina teacher. Harvard Educational Review 80: 74–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Carter Andrews, Dorinda J., Eliana Castro, Christine L. Cho, Emery Petchauer, Gail Richmond, and Robert Floden. 2019. Changing the narrative on diversifying the teaching workforce: A look at historical and contemporary factors that inform recruitment and retention of teachers of color. Journal of Teacher Education 70: 6–12. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cherng, Hua-Yu Sebastian, and Peter F. Halpin. 2016. The importance of minority teachers: Student perceptions of minority versus white teachers. Educational Researcher 45: 407–20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Coles, Justin A., and Darrius Stanley. 2021. Black liberation in teacher education: (Re)envisioning educator preparation to defend Black life and possibility. Northwest Journal of Teacher Education 16: 6. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Conrad, Joseph. 2007. Heart of Darkness. London: Penguin Books. [Google Scholar]
- Cureton, Ashley, and Erick Aguinaldo. 2023. Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: Muslim Refugee Youths’ Identity Development and Civic Engagement in School-Based Settings. Youth and Society 56: 795–812. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Damaschke-Deitrick, Lisa, Ericka Galegher, Annika Wilmers, and Alexander W. Wiseman. 2024. Preparing and supporting teachers of immigrant and refugee students. Journal of Teacher Education 75: 123–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dee, Thomas S. 2004. Teachers, race, and student achievement in a randomized experiment. Review of Economics and Statistics 86: 195–210. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dee, Thomas S., and Emily Penner. 2017. The Causal Effects of Cultural Relevance: Evidence From an Ethnic Studies Curriculum. American Educational Research Journal 54: 127–66. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- DeMartino, Linsay. 2021. De-Centering the Deficit Framework: Courageous Refugee Mentors in Educational Spaces. Urban Review 53: 243–63. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dumas, Michael J. 2016. Against the Dark: Antiblackness in Education Policy and Discourse. Theory Into Practice 55: 11–19. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dunstan, David. 2016. Sustaining Arts Programs in Public Education. [PDF] Semantic Scholar. Available online: https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:145819336 (accessed on 15 April 2024).
- Egalite, Anna J., Brian Kisida, and Marcus A. Winters. 2015. Representation in the classroom: The efect of own-race teachers on student achievement. Economics of Education Review 45: 44–52. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ennser-Kananen, Johanna, and Andie Fang Wang. 2016. ‘I am combined’: Chinese Teachers’ Cultural Identities and Pedagogical Learning. Journal of Language Teaching and Research 7: 625–34. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gershenson, Seth, Cassandra M. D. Hart, Joshua Hyman, Constance A. Lindsay, and Nicholas W. Papageorge. 2022. The Long-Run Impacts of Same-Race Teachers. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 14: 300–342. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gotanda, Neil. 2011. The racialization of Islam in American law. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 637: 184–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gratto, Sharon Davis. 2002. Arts education in alternative school formats. Arts Education Policy Review 103: 17–24. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Haep, Anna, Kristin Behnke, and Gisela Steins. 2016. Classroom observation as an instrument for school development: School principals’ perspectives on its relevance and problems. Studies in Educational Evaluation 49: 1–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Haines, Shana J., and Cynthia C. Reyes. 2023. Teacher perspectives on fostering collaborative relationships with families with refugee backgrounds. Teachers and Teaching 29: 497–512. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ingersoll, Richard, and Henry May. 2011. Recruitment, Retention and the Minority Teacher Shortage. Available online: https://www.cpre.org/sites/default/files/researchreport/1221_minorityteachershortagereportrr69septfinal.pdf (accessed on 1 April 2024).
- Jogan, Sushma N. 2018. Classroom observation as an important tool for initial trainee teachers. International Journal of Current Research 10: 75808–11. Available online: https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED601983 (accessed on 5 April 2024).
- Kane, Thomas J. 2012. Capturing the dimensions of effective teaching. Education Next 12: 35–41. [Google Scholar]
- Kárman, Marianna. 2021. Ko nipa Africa!—Teach about Africa! Challenging stereotypes about Africa. Hungarian Educational Research Journal 11: 449–62. Available online: https://akjournals.com/view/journals/063/11/4/article-p449.xml (accessed on 3 March 2024). [CrossRef]
- Keser Ozmantar, Zehra, Melis Cin, and Faith Mkwananzi. 2023. Becoming a Teacher: The Liminal Identities and Political Agency of Refugee Teachers. Journal of Human Development and Capabilities 24: 336–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kleen, Hannah, Meike Bonefeld, Sabine Glock, and Oliver Dickhäser. 2019. Implicit and explicit attitudes toward Turkish students in Germany as a function of teachers’ ethnicity. Social Psychology of Education 22: 883–99. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lewis, Gwyn, Bryn Jones, and Colin Baker. 2012. Translanguaging: Origins and development from school to street and beyond. Educational Research and Evaluation 18: 641–54. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lindsay, Constance A., and Cassandra M. D. Hart. 2017. Teacher Race and School Discipline. Education Next 17. Available online: http://ezproxy.rowan.edu/login?url=https://search.proquest.com/docview/1865859644?accountid=13605 (accessed on 12 March 2024).
- Lindsay, Constance, A. Erica Blom, and Alexandra Tilsley. 2017. Diversifying the Classroom: Examining the Teacher Pipeline. Washington, DC: Urban Institute. [Google Scholar]
- Marom, Lilach. 2019. From Experienced Teachers to Newcomers to the Profession: The Capital Conversion of Internationally Educated Teachers in Canada. Teaching and Teacher Education 78: 85–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Maylor, Uvanney. 2009. “They do not relate to black people like us”: Black teachers as role models for Black pupils. Journal of Education Policy 24: 1–21. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mignolo, Walter D. 2009. Epistemic Disobedience, Independent Thought and Decolonial Freedom. Theory, Culture and Society 26: 1–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Milner, H. Richard. 2006. The promise of black teachers’success with black students. Educational Foundations 20: 89–104. [Google Scholar]
- Navarro, Oscar, Christine L. Quince, Betina Hsieh, and Sherry L. Deckman. 2019. Transforming teacher education by integrating the funds of knowledge of teachers of Color. Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies 41: 282–316. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Nguyen, Tuan D., Chanh B. Lam, and Paul Bruno. 2022. Is There a National teacher Shortage? A Systematic Examination of Reports of Teacher Shortages in the United States (EdWorkingPaper No. 22-631). Providence: Annenberg Institute at Brown University. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Pew Research Center. 2021a. America’s Public School Teachers Are Far Less Racially and Ethnically Diverse than Their Students. Available online: https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2021/12/10/americas-public-school-teachers-are-far-less-racially-and-ethnically-diverse-than-their-students/ (accessed on 10 March 2024).
- Pew Research Center. 2021b. U.S. Public School Students often Go to Schools Where at Least Half of Their Peers are the Same Race or Ethnicity. Available online: https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2021/12/15/u-s-public-school-students-often-go-to-schools-where-at-least-half-of-their-peers-are-the-same-race-or-ethnicity/ (accessed on 10 March 2024).
- Pickering, Michael. 2001. Stereotyping: The Politics of Representation. Basingstoke: Palgrave. [Google Scholar]
- Price, Jeremy N. 1999. Racialized masculinities: The diploma, teachers, and peers in the lives of young African American men. Youth and Society 31: 224–63. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Quiocho, Alice, and Francisco Rios. 2000. The power of their presence: Minority group teachers and schooling. Review of Educational Research 70: 485–528. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Randolph, Brenda, and Betsy DeMulder. 2008. I Didn’t Know There Were Cities in Africa! Teaching Tolerance. 34. Available online: https://www.learningforjustice.org/magazine/fall-2008/i-didnt-know-there-were-cities-in-africa (accessed on 10 March 2024).
- Refugee Council of Australia. 2024. How Many Refugees Are There in the World? Available online: https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/how-many-refugees/ (accessed on 15 March 2024).
- Selod, Saher. 2015. Citizenship Denied: The Racialization of Muslim American Men and Women post-9/11. Critical Sociology 41: 77–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Selod, Saher, and David G. Embrick. 2013. Racialization and Muslims: Situating the Muslim Experience in Race Scholarship. Sociology Compass 7: 644–55. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Shapiro, Shawna, and Michael T. MacDonald. 2017. From deficit to asset: Locating discursive resistance in a refugee-background student’s written and oral narrative. Journal of Language, Identity & Education 16: 80–93. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Shidler, Linda. 2024. Retaining teachers through building confidence in collaboration skills: Promoting 21st-century teaching skills in teacher education. Journal of Education and Training Studies 12: 1–10. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Shire, Warsan. 2017. “Home” by Warsan Shire. Facing History & Ourselves. Available online: https://www.facinghistory.org/resource-library/home-warsan-shire (accessed on 1 April 2024).
- Singh, M. 2018. Role models without guarantees: Corrective representations and the cultural politics of a Latino maleteacher in the borderlands. Race, Ethnicity & Education 21: 288–305. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Startz, Dick. 2017. Immigrant Teachers Play a Critical Role in American Schools. Brookings Institution. Available online: https://www.brookings.edu/articles/immigrant-teachers-play-a-critical-role-in-american-schools/ (accessed on 6 April 2024).
- United Nations. n.d. Refugees. Available online: https://www.un.org/en/global-issues/refugees (accessed on 3 April 2024).
- Urbani, Jacquelyn M., Shadi Roshandel, Rosemarie Michaels, and Elizabeth Truesdell. 2017. Developing and modeling 21st-century skills with preservice teachers. Teacher Education Quarterly 44: 27–50. Available online: https://www.jstor.org/stable/90014088 (accessed on 5 April 2024).
- Vélez-Ibáñez, Carlos G., and J.ames B. Greenberg. 1992. Formation and transformation of funds of knowledge among U.S.-Mexican households. Anthropology & Education Quarterly 23: 313–35. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
González-Doğan, S.; Turan, A.; Hovsepian, S.; Anayatova, D. Credentials, Perpetual “Foreignness”, and Feeling out of Place: Three Stories of Resilience from Teachers of Refugee Background. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 363. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13070363
González-Doğan S, Turan A, Hovsepian S, Anayatova D. Credentials, Perpetual “Foreignness”, and Feeling out of Place: Three Stories of Resilience from Teachers of Refugee Background. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(7):363. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13070363
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonzález-Doğan, Shyla, Adnan Turan, Setrag Hovsepian, and Dilraba Anayatova. 2024. "Credentials, Perpetual “Foreignness”, and Feeling out of Place: Three Stories of Resilience from Teachers of Refugee Background" Social Sciences 13, no. 7: 363. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13070363
APA StyleGonzález-Doğan, S., Turan, A., Hovsepian, S., & Anayatova, D. (2024). Credentials, Perpetual “Foreignness”, and Feeling out of Place: Three Stories of Resilience from Teachers of Refugee Background. Social Sciences, 13(7), 363. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13070363