Ethnic Minority Agency in Mainstream Education

A Regional Perspective on a National Challenge

Andrew Goodwyn|Nasreen Majid|Samson Maekele Tsegay
Emerald
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Hardback
9781836622659
16 December 2025
£75.00
eBook (PDF)
9781836622642
25 November 2025
£75.00
eBook (ePub)
9781836622666
25 November 2025
£75.00

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

Ethnic Minority Agency in Mainstream Education provides a comprehensive overview of the lives of BAME educational professionals in a regional environment, dominated by racism, both explicit and implicit. Each chapter is informed by original research examining these different strands of the teaching profession and revealing the stories of their aspirations and obstacles in becoming successful educators. Irrespective of the role, position, level of experience of BAME professionals in mainstream education, there is a thread of marginalisation, injustice and oppression that runs through their individual and collective narratives.

Across the various chapters the experiences of school leaders, teachers, teaching assistants and teacher educators are captured through the empirical research which foregrounds the exploration, analysis and discussion. For some of the authors, their lived experience is intertwined with their chapter content and for others a candid examination of their ontological positioning and its impact on the storied experiences of their research participant.

Ethnic Minority Agency in Mainstream Education offers a platform for senior leaders in mainstream education to take action based on the findings of this research. Recommendations for change and reform focused on the regional experience of BAME educators are presented, demonstrating the urgency for more targeted action to centre support for BAME professionals and to remove the explicit and implicit barriers.

Chapter 1. Introduction: The possibilities of a racially just society, towards concrete utopias; Andrew Goodwyn, Samson Maekele Tsegay, and Nasreen Majid

  • Chapter 2. BAME Professionals in England: National and Regional Issues; Samson Maekele Tsegay and Tarisai Chikomba
  • Chapter 3. From ECT to SLT: Black teachers’ progression into educational leadership roles in primary schools in England; Steve Connolly and Esther Idowu
  • Chapter 4. Who supports the support staff? The experiences of BAME Teaching Assistants and Supply Staff?; Cathal Butler
  • Chapter 5. Prevailing against the odds: The challenges and resilience of teachers of colour; Andrew Goodwyn
  • Chapter 6. Working in the white [not ivory] tower: The experiences of BAME academics in Higher Education Institutions; Andrew Goodwyn and Nasreen Majid
  • Chapter 7. Bedfordshire's first black male police officer: Memoir and collaboration as education; Oli Belas, Nicola Darwood, and Eric Edwin
  • Chapter 8. Conclusion and Recommendations; Andrew Goodwyn, Nasreen Majid, and Samson Maekele Tsegay

Andrew Goodwyn is Emeritus Professor at the University of Reading where he was Head of the Institute of Education, he is a former school teacher and has worked in educational research and scholarship and teacher education, publishing extensively for over 40 years.

Nasreen Majid is an educator with over 25 years’ of experience. She is a Lecturer in Education at University College London, UK.

Samson Maekele Tsegay is a Research Fellow at Anglia Ruskin University, UK. Samson studied MA and PhD degrees in Educational Leadership and Policy.