"A Narrative Inquiry: Professional Identity of Tenured Black Female Fac" by Josie Andrews
 

Doctoral Dissertations

Orcid ID

http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6702-0071

Date of Award

5-2023

Degree Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy

Major

Educational Psychology and Research

Major Professor

Mitsunori Misawa

Committee Members

Ralph G. Brockett, Gary J. Skolits, Juanita Johnson-Bailey

Abstract

A growing interest in professional identity development in higher education has led scholars to reexamine how individuals think, perform, and feel like a professional within their profession. Sadly, research on professional identity development and the intersection of race, gender, tenure, and sociohistorical context have been limited. Therefore, the purpose of this narrative inquiry was to understand tenured Black female faculty members’ stories of how they developed and maintained their professional identity at predominantly White institutions in the Southern region of the US. The three major questions that guided the inquiry were: 1) How do tenured Black female faculty define their own professional identity? 2) What stories do tenured Black female faculty share about developing their professional identity at PWIs in the Southern region of the US? 3) What stories do tenured Black female faculty share about maintaining their professional identity at PWIs in the Southern region of the US? Using purposeful and snowball sampling strategies, 10 tenured Black female faculty members were recruited from eight PWIs in the Southern region of the US. Semi-structured interviews were employed to capture the participants’ narratives. Using a thematic analysis of narrative, five themes emerged from the interview data: 1) “wearing the cloak” of being the first tenured Black woman, 2) becoming a professor, doing professional roles, and serving as a professional contributor, 3) “oh, my professional identity is,” 4) selective dignity violations: “couldn’t give two pennies about me,” and 5) self-care: political warfare. The themes indicated that despite the participants’ triumphs at PWIs, they continued to struggle for a professional identity due to their positionality. Lastly, implications for practice and future research in the fields of adult and higher education were discussed.

Available for download on Tuesday, May 15, 2029

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