What does it mean to pursue a profession that was never designed with you in mind-and still choose to lead within it?
Becoming Visible is a powerful, research-informed examination of how Black men navigate, interpret, and ultimately transform teacher education. Grounded in lived experience and sharpened through deep institutional insight, this book moves beyond surface-level conversations about diversity to expose the structural realities shaping who enters, persists, and leads in the teaching profession.
Through vivid scenarios, real-world patterns, and clear analysis, this book reveals what often goes unnamed:
How professionalism is defined-and who it was designed forWhy access alone is not enough without belonging and supportHow bias shows up in evaluation, mentorship, and opportunityWhat it actually takes to navigate systems that were not built with you at the centerBut this is not a deficit narrative.
This is a blueprint.
At the core of the book is the C.A.R.E. Model-Community, Access, Representation, and Equity-a practical, systems-level framework for redesigning teacher education so that Black men are not just recruited, but sustained, recognized, and positioned to lead.
Each chapter moves from lived experience to structural insight to actionable strategy, offering readers both clarity and direction.
This book is for:
Black men considering or currently navigating teacher educationEducators seeking to better understand the experiences of Black male candidatesInstitutions ready to move from intention to implementationLeaders committed to strengthening educator pipelines through design, not rhetoricBecoming Visible is more than a reflection-it is a call to action.
Not to simply enter the profession, but to reshape it.