Combating Racism in Educator Prep: Justice and Joy for BIPOC Individuals
AACTE’s “Combating Racism is Educator Preparation Series” began in 2021 with three specific objectives for our membership, audience, and the field at large:
- Contextualize the role of racism in structural oppression and how the education system at large maintains and promulgates these oppressive systems.
- Engage with you, our audience, to understand you and your organization’s understanding and capacity to address racism using antiracist, abolitionist, inclusive, and intersectional policies.
- Normalize and humanize critical conversations around racism within the field that will lead to collaborative action around structural oppression in education.
In response to the incredibly high attendance and engagement to these webinars so far, we want to take what we have learned and to make this series more accessible and actionable. To that end, AACTE has worked with some of our most experienced members to help drive the remainder of the series and future professional development for the field on this topic that comes from it. The Four Themes you can expect to see webinars on throughout 2021 will be
- Identity & Mental Health
- Legislating Oppression
- Leadership
- Intersectionality
In order to meet you all where you are, we will begin instituting informal affinity groups for webinars where appropriate. Affinity groups are not meant to be exclusionary, but instead, can be thought of as breakout groups educators use to efficiently teach before coming back together to share and collaborate on all we learn. The objectives for every webinar will be the same, however the conversation and background information will be curated for informal affinity groups when deemed best for our collective goals to address racism in education preparation.
The next webinar for a BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) Affinity Group will be under the theme Identity & Mental Health, entitled “Justice and Joy” on June 23rd at 2pm EST. Register Today!
Many of us entered the field of education to play a part in the promise of meritocracy our education system is supposed to support. In order to get closer to that promise being a reality as opposed to a narrative used to sustain institutional oppression, we as individuals need to sustain ourselves in the larger fight for social justice within our schools. Therefore, AACTE thought it appropriate to begin our informal affinity group webinars with spaces to discuss how we can support ourselves and each other. In this webinar our esteemed panel will provide and discuss best practices and resources BIPOC educators and candidates can use to sustain themselves so that you leave this webinar not just having learned, but also feeling energized, recommitted, and hopefully, a bit lighter. Register Today

Dr. Latunde supports students in the Doctor of Organizational Leadership programs by engaging with dissertation teams, and teaching Conflict Management, Decision-Making, Teams, Team Leadership, and Qualitative Methods.
Some of her recent work uses Critical Race Theory to center the voices of African American/Black families as they expand the often-limited opportunities to engage with schools. Dr. Latunde’s research interests include family engagement, Parent Councils, and Strategic partnerships.


designed to broaden the historical narrative of Black Americans so to include both their numerous and significant contributions to American History, and complex personal characteristics that enabled them to persevere and overcome despite difficulty.