ABSTRACT
Social work education promotes a critical lens through which students engage with power systems. As educators, faculty often decide whether to share their own identities with students, yet we lack research on reasons faculty choose to share (or not share) their identities, and the ways in which privilege and marginalization affect that decision. Using a mixed-method approach, this study (N=84) addresses that gap. Quantitative analysis revealed that age was associated with intentionally sharing that identity; no other social identity was significantly related to disclosure practices. Qualitative analysis revealed the nuanced reasons that faculty elected to disclose or not disclose their identities. Discussion of these findings is situated in critical pedagogy, examining how faculty address power structures in the classroom.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Elizabeth Grace Holman
Elizabeth Grace Holman is an assistant professor at Bowling Green State University. Megan S. Paceley is an associate professor at The University of Kansas. C.L. Dominique Courts is a doctoral student at the University of Connecticut.