“…Previous research clearly demonstrates that Black girls’ school experiences are shaped by societal racism and sexism (e.g., Joseph, Mitchell, & Bianco, 2018; Morris, 2016; Neal‐Jackson, 2018). From hair‐based discrimination (Macon, 2014; Rogers, Versey, & Cielto, 2021) and colorism (Rosario et al., 2021; Ward, Robinson‐Wood, & Boadi, 2016), to peer exclusion (Ispa‐Landa, 2013) and hyper‐sexualization and sexual harassment (Harris & Kruger, 2020), Black girls experience schools in ways that are distinct from Black boys and white girls (Carter Andrews, Brown, Castro, & Id‐Deen, 2019). In a meta‐ethnographic review of 37 qualitative studies of Black girls’ schooling experiences, Neal‐Jackson (2018) identified three empirical themes: (1) low academic expectations from teachers/administrators, (2) constrained and stereotyped Black (feminine) identities, and (3) limited learning opportunities, restrictive rules, and harsh discipline.…”