TY - JOUR
T1 - Racialized Experiences of Higher Education Professionals During the COVID-19 Pandemic
T2 - Prioritizing Well-Being and Shifting From Personal Resistance to Institutional Responsibility
AU - Wright-Mair, Raquel
AU - Ramos, Delma
AU - Hubain, Bryan
AU - McCartin, Lyda Fontes
AU - Rodriguez, Liliana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© University of Toronto Press, 2025.
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - This article employs narrative inquiry and counter-storytelling as methodological and analytical tools to unpack the collective experiences of racially minoritized student affairs practitioners and faculty during the COVID-19 pandemic. The authors’ narratives underscore factors that impeded their success during the pandemic and the nuances of practitioner and faculty fatigue above and beyond the greater responsibilities often placed on racially minoritized employees, resulting in compromised well-being. As the authors reconcile their experiences, they also unpack their feelings of guilt over their clear complicity as they continue to exist and lead in a system they often resent. In conversation with existing literature, the authors’ narratives inform a set of recommendations for human resource practices higher education that call for a shift in responsibility for the well-being of racially minoritized practitioners and faculty in higher education institutions.
AB - This article employs narrative inquiry and counter-storytelling as methodological and analytical tools to unpack the collective experiences of racially minoritized student affairs practitioners and faculty during the COVID-19 pandemic. The authors’ narratives underscore factors that impeded their success during the pandemic and the nuances of practitioner and faculty fatigue above and beyond the greater responsibilities often placed on racially minoritized employees, resulting in compromised well-being. As the authors reconcile their experiences, they also unpack their feelings of guilt over their clear complicity as they continue to exist and lead in a system they often resent. In conversation with existing literature, the authors’ narratives inform a set of recommendations for human resource practices higher education that call for a shift in responsibility for the well-being of racially minoritized practitioners and faculty in higher education institutions.
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U2 - 10.3138/02_Wright-Mair_4
DO - 10.3138/02_Wright-Mair_4
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:86000042803
SN - 2562-783X
VL - 43
SP - 29
EP - 53
JO - Journal of Education Human Resources
JF - Journal of Education Human Resources
IS - 1
ER -