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The conference aims to help Duval County hire, retain more black, Hispanic male teachers

The conference aims to help Duval County hire, retain more black, Hispanic male teachers
The conference aims to help Duval County hire, retain more black, Hispanic male teachers

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The Lift and Lead Conference – the first of its kind in Duval County – is helping the county achieve an important goal: hiring and retaining more black and Hispanic men as teachers in the county.

Keeping men like second-grade teacher Nick Nelson in the classroom and trying to inspire one of his old students to become a teacher.

“He said, you know, Mr. Nelson, all jokes aside, I’ve really thought about it because you’ve made it look pretty cool. I think that might be what I want to do,” said Nelson, who teaches at Sabal Palm Elementary School. “I read it. ‘I’m doing this because you made it look cool.’ It gave me chills and that’s why I do what I do.”

Eligio Calatayud, a Spanish teacher at Mandarin High School, emphasized the importance of role models.

“We can convey that to them and it can be a win-win for the community and for us,” he said.

The two-day conference at TIAA Bank Field and the Jesse Ball DuPont Building downtown is led by the Jacksonville Public Education Fund.

According to the JPEF, as of December 2022 there were a total of 1,628 male teachers in Duval County, and as of February 2023, the county had 509 black male teachers and 85 Hispanic male teachers.

That is an increase of 39 black male teachers and 15 Hispanic male teachers since May 2021.

But the numbers must continue to climb, the education fund said.

The goal is to have at least 1,000 black and Hispanic male teachers in Duval County classrooms by 2025, because according to JPEF, 62% of students in the county are black or brown.

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Edwin Mayorga, a longtime teacher, believes this push could encourage people to enter the industry, develop and retain current teachers, and build community.

“What Duval County is doing here is critical to impacting the lives of so many kids who need to see people who look like them and sound like them and come from communities like they do,” Mayorga said.

Dante Jennings and Dimas Vidales are both former teachers who now work with the education fund. They said targeting black and Hispanic male teachers is critical.

“This is a large urban school district, hovering between the 16th and 20th largest in the country, how important it is for our students to see themselves in who they are being taught by and led by and mentored and shaped by,” Jennings said.

That’s especially important since Hispanic students are the fastest-growing demographic in Duval County, according to Vidales.

– It is a satisfying profession. It is an honorable profession, Vidales said. “You can make an honest living doing it.”

Copyright 2023 by WJXT News4JAX – All rights reserved.

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