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Exits by Black and Hispanic Teachers Pose a New Threat to Covid-Era Education
Bryan Monroy, a physics teacher at Lennox Mathematics, Science & Technology Academy, in the Inglewood section of Los Angeles, says he鈥檚 battled thoughts of leaving the profession. 鈥淢ost teachers of color are choosing to return to the communities that have formed them and raised them, so we're feeling a double impact of the pandemic.鈥 (Heidi de Marco/KHN)

Exits by Black and Hispanic Teachers Pose a New Threat to Covid-Era Education

Lynette Henley needed one more year to receive her full pension after 40 years as a teacher, but she couldn鈥檛 convince herself it was worth the risk.

So Henley, 65, who has diabetes and congestive heart failure, retired last June as a math and history teacher at , in Vallejo, California, which serves mostly Black and Hispanic children.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e in a classroom with 16 to 20 kids and a lot of my students weren鈥檛 vaccinated,鈥 said Henley. 鈥淚 just didn鈥檛 feel safe. It wasn鈥檛 worth it to possibly die to teach.鈥

Henley, who is Black, is part of a nationwide surge of teachers who are leaving the profession 鈥 especially evident among members of the profession with minority backgrounds. Amid the pandemic鈥檚 toxic brew of death, illness, and classroom disruption, these departures of seasoned teachers have created another strain for students.

The California State Teachers鈥 Retirement System in the number of teacher retirements in the second half of 2020 compared with the same period in 2019. Of those surveyed, more than half cited challenges of teaching during the pandemic as their main reason for leaving. A by the National Education Association on Feb. 1 found that 55% of teachers planned to exit earlier than anticipated, up from 37% in August 2021. The numbers were highest among Black (62%) and Latino (59%) educators.

The issue was palpable when in-person classes resumed in Southern California in January. In some large districts, more than a quarter of schoolchildren were absent the first week back. Some of those who did return entered classrooms that had no teacher or were staffed by underqualified substitutes.

Heidi de Marco produjo el reporte de audio en colaboraci贸n con .

, an 11th grade physics teacher at , in the Inglewood section of Los Angeles, walked into a half-empty school after winter break.

Five teachers, about a fifth of the charter school鈥檚 staff, were out, presumedly sick with covid or taking care of relatives, said Monroy, 29. And that鈥檚 on top of an underlying problem hiring and holding onto staff, he said.

鈥淲e hired some people to teach chemistry and math and for whatever reason they had to resign halfway through the year during the pandemic with no one to replace them,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he kids had to finish off their year with substitutes and teacher鈥檚 aides, and that was really hard for them.鈥

Covid has been harder on teachers of color because many of them return to the communities where they were raised and which have suffered the most, Monroy said. His students are nearly all Hispanic and about 75% are on free or reduced lunch, he said. As the son of Mexican immigrants, he can relate to their struggles, but 鈥渂ecause there are so many similarities that resonate between me and my kids, the vicarious trauma is also even more real.鈥

that teachers of color improve educational outcomes for students of the same background. But Black and Hispanic teachers tend to have than their white colleagues, according to by the U.S. Department of Education, which cites a lack of support and poor working conditions as the impetus for early departures.

According to a by the Learning Policy Institute, a nonprofit research group in Palo Alto, shortages affect 80% of California school districts, most low-income families and students of color. To make up the gap, schools have hired poorly prepared replacements, which , said , chief of staff and director of state policy for the Learning Policy Institute. by her group found that minority-majority schools were four times as likely as mostly white schools to employ uncertified teachers.

Most of the students who attend San Gabriel High School, part of the Alhambra Unified School District, are socioeconomically disadvantaged. (Heidi de Marco/KHN)
鈥淚 used to really rely on music as a source of my own calm and well-being, but since music is part of my workday, it hasn鈥檛 been my first choice lately,鈥 says Benjamin Coria, who teaches music at San Gabriel High School. (Heidi de Marco/KHN)

Plunging standardized last year revealed a widening learning gap between whites and Black and Latino students. A little over a third of Black and Hispanic students met or in English, compared with 60% of whites. In math, only about a fifth of Black and Hispanic students met or exceeded standards, compared with nearly half of white students. Relative to 2018, Hispanic students鈥 scores fell by 12 percentage points in English. White students鈥 scores fell 5 percentage points, while those of Black students remained about the same, on average. (Hispanics can be of any race or combination of races.)

Online learning has been harder for poorer children, contributing to difficulties for their teachers. In July 2020, the surveyed more than 1,100 Los Angeles Unified School District families whose children attend historically low-income public schools and found that about 1 in 6 had no internet access at all and roughly 1 in 12 had mobile internet only. Additionally, 1 in 7 said they never had a space free of noise or distraction.

Teaching in person with the threat of covid, meanwhile, is 鈥渓iving in a constant state of anxiety鈥 because a single positive test in the classroom can disrupt all teaching plans instantaneously, said Katie Caster, manager of curriculum and evaluation at Latinos for Education in Boston,  a group that mentors new teachers.

Caster said teachers of color have an extra burden. 鈥淚 call it the brown tax. It鈥檚 having to go above and beyond all the time, whether it鈥檚 the cultural connection, the language, being asked to translate, or connecting families with resources,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he pandemic has exacerbated the issue.鈥

This problem was reflected in a by the nonprofits Teach Plus and the Education Trust, which found that teachers of color feel pressure to take on added work to help students who share their demographic backgrounds.

Monroy said the pandemic made him question his career.

鈥淏efore the pandemic, I was 100% certain that I would continue teaching and retire as a teacher,鈥 said Monroy. 鈥淣ow, feeling the dread of coming to work instead of feeling excitement, I have my doubts of even making it through the end of this year, let alone, like, staying until I retire.鈥

At L.A. County鈥檚 San Gabriel High School, where nearly three-quarters of the 1,777 students are , grades fell during the year of remote learning, said band and music teacher Benjamin Coria. 鈥淭hese students were occupied with pandemic-related things, like taking care of siblings, or working,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ome just didn’t engage no matter how many times you called home.鈥

Benjamin Coria, the band director at San Gabriel High School in San Gabriel, California, says dealing with family issues and trying to figure out a way to separate work from his home environment, while raising two kids, has been challenging. (Heidi de Marco/KHN)

Coria鈥檚 school is part of the Alhambra Unified School District, where absenteeism was 27% in the first week back in school, starting Jan. 3. In neighboring L.A. Unified, the absentee rate was 31% when classes resumed on Jan. 11. (By Feb. 4, to 13%; Alhambra鈥檚 was down to 14%.)

The Alhambra district, whose teachers are 70% people of color, hired 286 substitutes to help fill the gaps for teachers out sick or on leave. In many cases, district administrators are filling in. Still, the school has had to plan days to help teachers catch up.

The pandemic has also taken a toll on Coria. His father died just before the pandemic, and he lost a grandfather to covid a year later. Snarled school and work schedules have sharpened daily challenges for him, his wife, and their two children. 鈥淎ll these things that would normally be hard are just so much harder in this environment,鈥 said Coria, 39, who has taught for 16 years.

But Coria, whose parents were first-generation Mexican Americans, isn鈥檛 retiring. He does his best to remain upbeat in the classroom, he said, and smiles even when he doesn鈥檛 feel like smiling.

鈥淲e set the temperature,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e not in the mood, then the students aren鈥檛 going to be. Anything I can do to make the environment a little more positive, including for myself.鈥

This story was produced by , which publishes , an editorially independent service of the .