“…While all teacher experience stressors, teachers in urban schools, as opposed to their suburban counterparts, may more acutely experience such challenges, given that students in urban environments are more likely to experience social–emotional difficulties (Atkins, Graczyk, Frazier, & Adil, ; Balfanz, Herzog, & Mac Iver, ). In turn, teachers in urban schools, who disproportionately serve low‐income and minority students, encounter notably higher levels of stress than teachers in other schools (Ouellette et al, ; Shernoff, Mehta, Atkins, Torf, & Spencer, ). Faced with higher levels of stress and oftentimes without adequate support to meet their students’ needs, urban teachers increasingly experience burnout, a process of repeated emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and feelings of a lack of personal accomplishment, which leads them to leave the teaching profession at alarming rates (Fantuzzo et al, ; Yang, Ge, Hu, Chi, & Wang, ).…”