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Campus & Community

SOURCE Enables School of Education Undergraduates to Research, Explore Profession

Wednesday, May 7, 2025, By News Staff
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The image shows three people standing next to a blue banner with an orange "S" and the text "黑料不打烊 School of Education."

Through a research project funded by the (SOURCE), School of Education (SOE) seniors Denaysha Macklin ’25 and Emma Wareing ’25 are continuing research to investigate barriers women of color face in advancing from K-12 teachers to school leaders.

The project鈥攃alled “Pipeline to Educational Leadership Positions for Women of Color,鈥 now in its fifth year鈥攗tilizes qualitative interviews with minority women who serve or have served as district-level administrators, examining the adversities they have overcome in obtaining their positions.

Timely Research

Both Macklin and Wareing earned a SOURCE fellowship after Professor encouraged them to apply. The pair started their research over the summer of 2024 with guidance from Theoharis, who has been a SOURCE advisor since the project began.

SOURCE offers a range of programs to foster and support undergraduate participation in faculty-guided scholarly research. Since summer 2021, 12 SOE faculty have mentored undergraduates through SOURCE grants and programs. Director Kate Hanson says student participants build research skills, learn to design and revise projects, present their work and produce timely contributions to their discipline.

鈥淭hey are able to connect their knowledge from their own education to innovative and cutting-edge research,鈥 Hanson says, noting that SOE students can use their new understanding of the broader landscape in both their future classrooms and educational leadership roles.

Macklin and Wareing began their portion of the project by reviewing previous years鈥 transcripts before connecting with educational leaders to request and conduct interviews over the spring 2025 semester. 鈥淯sing qualitative methods allows us to fill the gap of literature that highlights these shifts to leadership roles,鈥 Theoharis says.

Each year, students have sought to speak with at least two women, conducting two-part interviews to inquire about career experiences, paths and transitions to administration, as well as any racial and gender barriers they faced. As the project continues, with future undergraduate researchers adding more first-person accounts, Theoharis says at some point all the interviews will be combined and published.

Inspirational Women

The image shows three people sitting in an office setting. One person is seated on the left side of a wooden desk facing two other individuals, who are seated on the right side.

Professor George Theoharis discusses the SOURCE-funded research project “Pipeline to Educational Leadership Positions for Women of Color鈥 with Emma Wareing ’25 (seated left) and Denaysha Macklin ’25.

Wareing and Macklin will join Theoharis to present their findings at the American Education Research Association (AERA) conference, April 23-27 in Denver, Colorado.

鈥淎ERA is the biggest, most prestigious education research conference,鈥 Theoharis says. 鈥淪ince Emma and Denaysha are focused on school leaders, they will present in the division on administration and leadership, sharing the project with researchers, faculty and doctoral students.鈥

At past conferences, student research has been well received. 鈥淚t鈥檚 typically not a space for undergraduates, so when attendees hear from them, they鈥檝e been very impressed,鈥 Theoharis says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been pleasantly surprised several times how gender and racially affirming the space has been for our students.鈥

Theoharis notes that the presentations overwhelmingly attract women of color whose own experiences resonate with students鈥 findings, which, Theoharis says, helps the young researchers see a potential future in such spaces, affirming that they belong.

鈥淚 don’t remember having a Black woman as a teacher, let alone [in] leadership,鈥 Macklin says, 鈥淕etting to talk to people who were in these positions and still are, it makes me able to see myself there, whereas before I couldn’t really see myself doing anything more than being a teacher.鈥

A goal of the project is to document the stories and experiences of women of color because, Theoharis says, too often teachers don’t reflect the diversity represented in the student body. Within school administration, he adds, there is an even more disproportionate lack of minority women.

鈥淧art of the research is to understand their experiences,鈥 says Theoharis, who notes students use a critical race theory framework and incorporate the idea of counter narratives, listening to the voices of marginalized processionals. Those interviewed are specifically asked about barriers they鈥檝e faced around sexism and racism.

A surprising theme Macklin discovered in her interviews is resilience: 鈥淭hey are such inspirational women and have so many lessons to share. Hearing their stories and hearing how positive they still are is motivating,” Macklin says.

Intergenerational Sharing

Wareing, who is Asian, says the project also has helped her imagine herself in such roles: 鈥淚 can finally see myself there鈥攊n actuality, not just in theory,” says Wareing, who, like Macklin, had little exposure to non-white teachers or administrators.

For her interviews, Wareing chose to focus on Asian women, who reported that their experiences with forms of oppression were often less explicit than what past interviewees shared. 鈥淏ut racism did play a factor and impacted how they carried themselves in these positions because of Asian stereotypes and expectations placed onto them,鈥 says Wareing, whose subjects spoke about being immigrants and growing up and being educated with different cultural norms and how each impacted their leadership styles.

The students鈥 personal and professional realizations are a key benefit of the SOURCE fellowship, according to Theoharis. 鈥淚t connects them with people in the field and helps sets their sights on potential leadership roles. The intergenerational sharing is a really nice part of this.鈥

In addition to introducing undergraduates to research, SOURCE pays an hourly rate for the work and funds conference travel. 鈥淚t raises the profile of our students and the school,鈥 Theoharis says. 鈥淏ecause our students consistently get these grants, it says the School of Education has undergraduates who are engaging in serious research. … Our School can do research at the highest level.鈥

The project鈥檚 original premise developed from a proposal made to Theoharis by Jenny Gines 鈥21, now an eighth-grade teacher. Previous student researchers included SOE alumnae Ashanti Hunter 鈥22, Michelle Ho 鈥22, Savannah Stocker 鈥23, Emily Peterson 鈥23, Amanda Feliz 鈥24 and Kamille Montgomery 鈥24.

Theoharis says SOURCE applications were submitted this winter by juniors Vera Wang 鈥26 and Eliani Jimenez Merino 鈥26, who will start their part of the research endeavor this summer.

Thinking of the time when all the 鈥淧ipeline to Educational Leadership鈥 interviews are curated into a publication, Macklin says she hopes such a collection can widely inform about barriers to professional growth and help remove them: 鈥淚 feel the project鈥檚 goal is to identify the problems. Then we can expose those problems and attack them before they become a problem for the next generation,鈥 Macklin says.

Story by Ashley Kang 鈥04, G鈥11

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