Skip to main content

Ebony
McGee
,
PhD

Professor

Departmental Affiliations

Primary
Experiences & Accomplishments
Education
PhD
University of Illinois at Chicago
2009
MS
New Jersey Institute of Technology
1998
BS
North Carolina Agricultural & Technical State University
1996
Overview

Dr. Ebony McGee, a 13-time NSF investigator awardee and electrical engineer by training, is a Professor of Innovation and Inclusion in the STEM Ecosystem at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Education and Department of Mental Health. She specializes in the research of race and structural racism within the STEM ecosystem, a role that has established her as the leading expert in this arena.

Dr. McGee's groundbreaking work in STEM education and occupation focuses on the experiences and mental/physical health outcomes for Black and other minoritized students and professionals. Her investigations extend beyond traditional boundaries, delving into the limits of resiliency, wellness, and job embeddedness within the STEM ecosystem. 

Responding to these challenges, Dr. McGee has pioneered multiple initiatives, such as the Racial Revolutionary and Inclusive Guidance for Health Throughout STEM (R-RIGHTS), the Explorations in Diversifying Engineering Faculty Initiative (EDEFI), and the Institute in Institute in Critical Quantitative and Mixed Methodologies Training for Underrepresented Scholars (ICQCM). These initiatives are made possible via support from the National Science Foundation, the Spencer Foundation, and the WT Grant Foundation.

Her most recent research, funded by a $2.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation, ventures into the intersection of STEM innovation and entrepreneurship. The program's mission is to unlock the entrepreneurial potential of underrepresented undergraduates in STEM over a five-year span, challenging systemic racism and fostering diverse business owners.

A significant portion of Dr. McGee's scholarship investigates how Afrofuturism—a movement that merges science, technology, and African diasporic culture to envision more equitable futures—can be leveraged to dismantle racial barriers in STEM. She co-authored a chapter on Afrofuturism in the "Handbook of Urban Education," emphasizing the potential of Afrofuturist principles to reimagine STEM for Black urban learners. Her work often highlights how Afrofuturist artists and writers, like Octavia E. Butler, use speculative fiction to address contemporary issues such as environmental justice, food insecurity, and advanced computing ethics, providing a visionary blueprint for real-world STEM innovations.

A key tenet in her work is equity ethics. Published in the Journal of Higher EducationJournal of Engineering EducationAmerican Journal of Education, and Teacher College Record, she has demonstrated that racially minoritized individuals in STEM are driven towards empathetic social causes and racial justice efforts, translating their own experiences into efforts to end disparities both locally and globally.

Dr. McGee's research culminated in her sole-authored book, "Black, Brown, Bruised: How Racialized STEM Education Stifles Innovation", which was crafted based on 319 interviews with high-achieving, underrepresented STEM undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty of color. Her book has received positive reviews in Teacher’s College Record, University World NewsScience Education Review,Chemistry World Review, and the Journal of Intersectionality.

Dr. McGee is a frequent contributor to op-eds in publications like ScienceThe Washington PostDiverse Issues in Higher EducationNature Human Behaviour and CancerThe Chronicle of Higher EducationHigher Education TodayEducation Week, and the British Broadcasting Company. Her research has appeared in ScienceUS News & World ReportDiverse Issues in Higher EducationInside Higher EducationThe Hechinger ReportNPR Codeswitch, The Tennessean, and the Washington Monthly.

 

Click on the links below to learn more about Dr. McGee’s work: 

Personal Website: https://www.ebonymcgeephd.com/

Visit the R-RIGHTS website at https://r-rights.com/

Visit the ICQCM website at https://www.icqcm.org/

LinkedIn Page: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ebony-mcgee-b0328211/

(1) Ebony O. McGee, Plottin 4A Black STEM Revolution (@RelationshipGAP) / X (twitter.com)

Twitter: @Relationshipgap

Select Publications
  • McGee, E. O. (2020). Black, Brown, Bruised: How Racialized STEM Education Stifles Innovation. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Education Press. https://www.hepg.org/hep-home/books/black,-brown,-bruised#

    McGee, E. O. (in press). Dying to Succeed: Realizing the Price of Academic Success for Black Women. Qualitative Inquiry.

     

    McGee, E. O. & Monroe-White, T.,* Engelman, S., Reinhart, M.,* and Yunyi, S.* (in-press). Mechanical, Electrical, & Computer Science Engineering Doctoral Students: Career Trajectories, Health, & Racial Activism.131st ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, American Society of Engineering Education Conference Proceeding 2024. June 23-26, 2024.

    McGee, E. O., Mitchell, J. T., Junhao C. (in press). New Homeland: How Geography Matters in the College Selection and Career Decisions of STEM PhDs. Journal of STEM Education: Innovations and Research.

    White, D. T.*, & McGee, E. O. (in press). Afrofuturism Unveiled: Illuminating The Path to Cultural Resurgence and Stem Excellence. Science for the People Magazine.

    Roemer, C. G., Goetzel, R.Z., Davis, M. F., Zhang, Y., Kent, K. B., Harter, J., McGee, E. O., Troester, J. M., Hilton, L., Stratton, S. K., Vietas, J., and MacKenzie, E. (In-press). Proceedings from a National Summit on Workplace Mental Health and Well-Being: A Focus on the Graduate Academic Environment. Dying to Succeed: Realizing the Price of Academic Success for Black Scholars (in STEM). Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (JOEM).

    McGee, E. O., Main, J., Hailu, M., & Miles, M.*, & Cox, M. (2024). Wage Disparities in Academia for Engineering Women of Color and the Limitations of Advocacy and Agency. Research in Higher Education. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11162-023-09766-3

     

    McGee, E. O. &Monroe-White, T.*, Laosebikan, O.*, and Vilfranc, C.* (2024). Interrogating the Relationship between Racial Activism and Academic Career

    Interest among STEM Doctoral Students. American Journal of Education. 130(2). https://doi.org/10.1086/728267

    https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/728267?af=R

     

    Miles, M.,* McGee, E. O., Botchway, P.* (2024). Mixed Reviews on Diversity Initiatives: Toward an Institutional Change Model for Black Faculty in Engineering and Computing. Frontiers in Education, STEM Education. 9:1324389. 

    doi: 10.3389/feduc.2024.1324389

     

    Coley, B. C.,  Allen, A. M., & Artis, S.,  Bekki, J. M., & Kadir, K.,  Pollock, M. C.,  Garrison Tull, R.,  Vanasupa, L., Williams, R. L.,  Hatfield, H. R., & McGee, E. O. (2024, February), View from the Kaleidoscope: Conceptualizing antiracist priorities for engineering as a collective across vantages Paper presented at 2024 Collaborative Network for Engineering & Computing Diversity (CoNECD), Arlington, Virginia. 10.18260/1-2--45494

     

    2023

    McGee, E. O., White, D.T.,* Cox, M. F., Main, J. B., and Parker, L.* (2023). How Women of Color Engineering Faculty Respond to Wage Disparities. In Joseph, T.D. and Hirschfield, L.F. (Eds.), Reexamining Racism, Sexism, and Identity Taxation in the Academy. Routledge Press: New York. Reexamining Racism, Sexism, and Identity Taxation in the Academy - 1st (routledge.com)

     

    McGee, E. O., Morton, T., White, D. T.* Frierson, W.* (2023). Accelerating Racial Activism in STEM Higher Education by Institutionalizing Equity Ethics. Teachers College Record. 125(9). Accelerating Racial Activism in STEM Higher Education by Institutionalizing Equity Ethics - Ebony O. McGee, Terrell R. Morton, Devin T. White, Whitney Frierson, 2023 (sagepub.com)

     

    Monroe-White, T.,* McGee, E. O., T. (2023). Toward a Race-Conscious Entrepreneurship Education: The Mediating Role of Racial Activism in Catalyzing Black Nascent STEM Entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurship Education and Pedagogy, 0(0). DOI: 10.1177/25151274231164927

     

    McGee, E. O., White, D.,* Parker, L.,* Cox, M. F., and Main, J. B. (2023). How Women of Color Engineering Faculty Respond to Wage Disparities. Ethnic and Racial Studies. DOI: 10.1080/01419870.2022.2159474

     

    Miles, M.*, White, D. T.*, Brockman, A.*, & McGee, E. O. (2023). How Do Black Engineering and Computing Doctoral Students Analyze and Appraise their (Depleted) STEM Diversity Programming? Frontiers in Education.8. doi: 10.3389/feduc.2023.1062556

     

    2022

    Yoon, S. Y., Aldridge, J., Cox, M. F., Main, J. B., & McGee, E. O. (2022). Validation of the Workplace Climate Scale for Faculty Framed in Intersectionality of Gender, Race/Ethnicity, and Class. Research in Higher Educationhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11162-022-09724-5

     

    Main, J. B., McGee, E. O., Cox, M. F., Tan, L., & Berdanier, C. G. P. (2022). Trends in the underrepresentation of women of color faculty in engineering (2005–2018). Journal of Diversity in Higher Education. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1037/dhe0000426

     

    McGee, E. O., & Parker, L.,* Taylor, O., Mack, K. (2022). HBCU College Presidents and their Racially Conscious Approaches to Diversifying STEM. The Journal of Negro Education, 90(3), 288-305. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/847767/summary

     

    Pearman II, F. A.* & McGee, E. O. (2022). Anti-Blackness and Racial Disproportionality in Gifted Education. Exceptional Children, 88(4), 359–380. doi:10.1177/00144029211073523

     

    McGee, E.O., Naphan-Kingery, D.,* Miles, M. L.,* & Joseph, O. (2022). Black Engineering and Computing Faculty’s Equity Ethic: Serving Black Students Between and through Academic Stages. Journal of Higher Education, 93(5), 702-734.  https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00221546.2022.2031704

     

    McGee, E. O., Jett, C., & White, D.* (2022). From Black Engineering Faculty to the Presidency: Pathways to Administration and University Leadership. Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 15(5), 643–656. https://doi.org/10.1037/dhe0000407

     

    Monroe-White, T.,* & McGee, E. O. (2022). Impact of Covid-19 on the Career Trajectories of Black, Indigenous and Latinx I.T. Graduate Students and Professionals. Southern Association for Information Systems (JSAIS), 9, 60-71. https://aisel.aisnet.org/jsais/vol9/iss2/5/ doi:10.17705/3JSIS.00027

     

    2021

    McGee, E. O. (2021). Fear, Fuel, and Fire! Black STEM Doctoral Students’ Career Decision-Making during the Trump Presidency. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education. DOI: 10.1080/09518398.2021.1930246

     

    McGee, E. O., Fang, Y.,* Li, Y. (Amanda),* Monroe-White, T.* (2021). How an Antiscience President and the COVID-19 Pandemic Altered the Career Trajectories of STEM PhD Students of Color. AERA Open, 7. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/23328584211039217

     

    McGee, E.O., Botchway, P. K.,* Naphan-Kingery, D.,* Brockman, A.* Houston, S. L.,* & White, D.*  (2021). Racism camouflaged as impostorism and the impact on black STEM doctoral students. Race, Ethnicity, and Education, 25(4), 487-507. DOI: 10.1080/13613324.2021.1924137

     

    BOOK CHAPTERS

    McGee, E. O. & White, D.* (April 2021). Afrofuturism: Reimagining STEM for Black Urban Learners. In R. H. Milner & K. Lomotey (Eds.), Handbook of Urban Education. New York: Routledge.

    https://www.routledge.com/Handbook-of-Urban-Education/IV-Lomotey/p/book/9780367354503

     

    Milner, H. R., Harmon, D. M., & McGee, E. O. (2021). Critical Race Theory, Teacher Education, and the “New” Focus on Racial Justice. In M. Lynn & A. D. Dixson (Eds.), The Handbook of Critical Race Theory in Education (2nd ed.). New York: Routledge Press. https://www.routledge.com/Handbook-of-Critical-Race-Theory-in-Education/Lynn-Dixson/p/book/9781138491724?fbclid=IwAR3BWjC1MvKjDp4-5lFCmsUCqueTKoaJOY5SR8UUeOTfCxjLpUPjFUPxMRE

     

    2020

    McGee, E. O. (2020). Interrogating Structural Racism in STEM Higher Education. Educational Researcher49(9), 633-644.

    https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.3102/0013189X20972718

    The 5th most downloaded article of 2022

     

    McGee, E. O., & Main, J., Miles, M. L.* & Cox, M. (2020). An Intersectional Approach to Investigating Persistence Among Women of Color Tenure-Track Engineering Faculty. Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering. 27(1), 57-84. DOI: 10.1615/JWomenMinorScienEng.2020035632

     

    Main, J. B., Tan, L., Cox, M. F., McGee, E. O., & Katz, A. (2020). The correlation between undergraduate student diversity and the representation of women of color faculty in engineering. Journal of Engineering Education, 109(4), 843-864. 

    DOI: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jee.20361

    Top 10 most downloaded publications in January - December 2020.

     

    Houston, S. L.,* Pearman, F. A.,* & McGee, E. O. (2020). Risk, Protection, and Identity Development in High‐Achieving Black Males in High School. Journal of Research on Adolescence, e12568, 1-21. https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.12568

     

    2019

    Ridgeway, M. L.,* Buenrostro, P., Marshall, S., Adams, M., & McGee, E. O. (2019).Cultivating Racial Solidarity among Mathematics Education Scholars of Color to Resist White Supremacy. The International Journal of Critical Pedagogy, 10(2), 97-125. http://libjournal.uncg.edu/ijcp/article/view/1901

     

    McGee, E. O., Naphan-Kingery, D. E.,* Mustafaa, F.,* Houston, S.,* Botchway, P.,* & Lynch, J.* (2019). Turned Off from an Academic Career While in the Academy: Engineering and Computing Doctoral Students and The Reasons for Their Dissuasion. International Journal of Doctoral Studies, 14, 277-305. http://ijds.org/Volume14/IJDSv14p277-305McGee5150.pdf

      

    Naphan-Kingery, D.,* Miles, M. L.,* Brockman, A.,* McKane, R.,* Botchway, P.,* & McGee, E. O. (2019). Investigation of an equity ethic in engineering and computing doctoral students. Journal of Engineering Education. https://doi.org/10.1002/jee.20284  

     

    McGee, E. O., Griffith, D. M., Houston, S.* (2019). “I Know I Have to Work Twice as Hard and Hope That Makes Me Good Enough”: Exploring the Stress and Strain of Black Doctoral Students in Engineering and Computing. Teachers College Record, 121(4), 1-38. http://www.tcrecord.org/Content.asp?ContentId=22610

    The Voice:https://vialogues.com/vialogues/play/51836/

     

    Book Chapter

    McGee, E. O., Robinson, W. H., Naphan-Kingery, D. E.,* Houston, S. L.,* & Leon-Perez, G. (2019). Determinants of Mental Health and Career Trajectories: Rationale and Design of the Engineering and Computing Doctoral Experiences Survey (ECDES). In E. O. McGee & W. H. Robinson (Eds.), Diversifying STEM: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Race and Gender (pp. 140-165). New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/diversifying-stem/9781978805675

     

    2018

    McGee, E. O. (2018). “Asian Fail, Black Genius:” The Detriment of Stereotype Lift and Stereotype Threat in High-Achieving Asian and Black STEM Students. AERA Open, 4(4). https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858418816658

    **Among the 10 most read AERA Open articles, from April 2019 through June 2020

     

    Ridgeway, M. L.,* & McGee, E. O. (2018). Black Mathematics Educators: Researching toward Racial Emancipation of Black Students. Urban Review, 50(2), 301-322. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11256-018-0452-2

     

    2017

    McGee, E. O., & Bentley, L. C.* (2017). The Equity Ethic: Black and Latinx College Students Reengineering Their STEM Careers toward Justice. American Journal of Education, 124(1), 1-36. http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/693954

     

    McGee, E. O., & Bentley, L. C.* (2017). The Troubled Success of Black Women in STEM. Cognition and Instruction, 35(4), 265-289. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07370008.2017.1355211

     

    McGee, E. O., Thakore, B. K., & LaBlance, S. (2017). The Burden of Being “Model”: Racialized Experiences of Asian STEM College Students. Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 10(3), 253-270.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/dhe0000022

     

    2016

    McGee, E. O. (2016). Devalued Black and Latino Racial Identities: A By-Product of College STEM Culture? American Educational Research Journal, 53(6), 1626-1662.

    https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.3102/0002831216676572

     

    McGee, E. O., & Stovall D. O. (2016). Reimagining Critical Race Theory in Education: Mental Health, Healing, and the Pathway to Liberatory Praxis. Republished as the centerpiece article in the Harvard Journal of African American Public Policy, (2015-16), 44-59. https://hjaap.hkspublications.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/14/2018/02/HJAAPP-2016.pdf

    McGee, E. O., White, D. T.,* Jenkins, A. K.,* Bentley, L.,* Houston, S.,* Smith, D.,* Bentley, L. C., Robinson, W., & Botchway, P. K.* (2016). Black engineering students’ motivation for PhD attainment: passion plus purpose. Journal for Multicultural Education, 10(2), 167-193. https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JME-01-2016-0007/full/html

Projects
June 2024 – May 2025 Center for Black Entrepreneurship (CBE) Fellowship: Black Founders’ Racialized Experiences and Ventures: A Multilevel Analysis. Amount: $20,000 Lead PI: T. Monroe-White, George Mason University Co-PI: E. O. McGee September 2023 – A