College of Education and Human Development

Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development

Darrius Stanley

  • Pronouns: he, him, his

  • Assistant Professor; Carmen Starkson Campbell Endowed Fellow for Innovation in Teacher Development

Darrius Stanley

Areas of interest

Black Education
Black Educator Retention
Community Engaged Educational Leadership
Urban Education

Degrees

PhD, Michigan State University, K-12 Educational Administration
MEd, University of Central Florida, Educational Leadership
BS, Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, Social Science Education (History)

Biography

My work centers the political, educational, and philosophical perspectives of Black people to unearth Black genius and possibility in education. I intend to explore and uplift Black people’s communal ways of knowing and existing in education, in hopes of envisioning a path to educational liberation. My scholarship sits at the intersection(s) of Black education, Black educators, and educational leadership. I leverage historical, community-based, and intersectional qualitative methodologies to better understand the experiences of Black educators in K-12 educational spaces. Further, my work builds on the rich legacy of Black educators as community educators to envision and conceptualize community-engaged educational leadership praxis.

Professional Affiliations

Publications

Stanley, D. A. (in press). Still in search of home: A critical race analysis of Black teacher turnover and exclusion. Journal of Negro Education.

Stanley, D. A., & Hinnant-Crawford, B. N. (2022). A Charge to Keep I Have: Black women teachers’ spirituality and the implications for educational leaders. Gender and Education, 34(7), 821-837.

Stanley, D. A., & Gilzene, A. (2022). Listening, Engaging, Advocating and Partnering (L.E.A.P): A model for responsible community engaged leadership. Journal of Research on Leadership Education. https://doi.org/10.1177/19427751221076409

Coles, J., & Stanley, D. A. (2021). Black Liberatory Thought in Teacher Education: A historical literacy for (re)envisioning U.S. educator preparation to defend Black life and possibility. Northwest Journal of Teacher Education, 16(1), 1-24. https://doi.org/10.15760/nwjte.2021.16.2.6

Stanley, D. A. (2020). Blood, sweat and tears: The organizational experiences of Black women teachers. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education. https://doi.org/10.1080/09518398.2020.1828647