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Ramos-Vielba, Irene; D'Este, Pablo – Studies in Higher Education, 2023
This paper examines women scientists' participation in Knowledge Exchange (KE) with nonacademic actors. We compare three KE types --informal engagement, formal engagement and commercialization-- and find significant differences in participation depending on type. In informal engagement, women and men participate equally, but women participate less…
Descriptors: Females, Scientists, Knowledge Management, Commercialization
Kayon A. Hall; Stephanie Aguilar-Smith – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
Neoliberalism occupies the walls of academia, seeping into the pulse and pace of faculty work and engendering precarity into academic life and the promotion and tenure process, particularly for Women of Color (WoC) scholars. Building on research on early-career faculty and Faculty of Color and informed by the theoretical concept of liminality, we…
Descriptors: Tenure, College Faculty, Academic Rank (Professional), Futures (of Society)
Sabika Khalid; Chunhai Gao; Gulnar Orynbek; Endale Tadesse – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
While it is often acknowledged that women academics encounter challenges in research, motivation, and collaboration compared to their male counterparts, this narrative perpetuates the widening scholarly publication disparity, especially in patriarchal societies and academia. However, recent research focusing solely on women has identified key…
Descriptors: Females, College Faculty, Women Faculty, Universities
Kulp, Amanda M.; Pascale, Amanda Blakewood; Wolf-Wendel, Lisa – Innovative Higher Education, 2022
Mid-career faculty members often seek to advance to the highest faculty rank of "full professor," but research suggests women and Black, Indigenous and Other People of Color (BIPOC) faculty face inequitable patterns in advancement to the full professor rank. This study focuses on associate professors' perceptions of "promotion…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Minority Group Teachers, Women Faculty, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Hava Rachel Gordon; Kate Willink; Keeley Hunter – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2024
Many professors, especially at the associate level, say yes to service requests despite the pervasive advice to "just say no." Much of this service constitutes "invisible labor" that diverts time and energy from efforts required to advance to the full professor rank. Based on in-depth interview research with 25 tenured…
Descriptors: Faculty Workload, College Faculty, Professional Identity, Academic Rank (Professional)
Castelao-Huerta, Isaura – Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education, 2023
In this article, I present how some women full professors have implemented stopping practices, thus setting limits to their academic work in a neoliberal context. From semi-structured and in-depth interviews with three women professors at the National University of Colombia, this research presents their stopping practices: saying "No"…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, College Faculty, Gender Differences, Working Hours
Filandri, Marianna; Pasqua, Silvia – Studies in Higher Education, 2021
The article analyses the effect of gender in professors' career advancement using data on the entire population of professors in the Italian university system, data on the National Scientific Qualification (NSQ) accreditation scheme, and data on scientific productivity (SciVal) for bibliometric scientific sectors. As NSQ accreditation is a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Gender Bias, Gender Discrimination
Rudakov, Victor N.; Prakhov, Ilya A. – Higher Education Quarterly, 2021
The study focuses on the issue of gender discrimination in pay among university faculty in Russia, a country with an exceptionally high share of female faculty in higher education. Using a comprehensive and nationally representative survey of university faculty, we found that although women in academia earn considerably less than men, gender…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gender Bias, College Faculty, Women Faculty
McChesney, Jasper; Bichsel, Jacqueline – College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, 2020
America's workforce is aging, and popular press articles have warned of a "silver tsunami" of retirements, particularly among the baby boomer generation. Dramatic headlines aside, even gradual changes in workforce demographics will affect hiring, budgeting, training, and more. Higher education tenure-track faculty may be uniquely…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Aging (Individuals), Tenure, Teacher Characteristics
Sue Clery – National Education Association, 2023
In this 2023 NEA Special Salary issue, a post-pandemic look at faculty salaries in 2022. What was found, looking at federal data, is that U.S. faculty's purchasing power--that is the value of your salary, considering inflation--is at historical lows. All the gains that were made incrementally since the Great Recession of 2008 have evaporated in…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Outcomes of Education, Teacher Salaries
Kara Poe Alexander; Lisa Shaver – College Composition and Communication, 2020
Women continue to be underrepresented at the highest academic rank of full professor. Studies show that once women earn tenure, they are inundated with teaching, service, and administrative responsibilities, which take time away from research and publication--the primary criteria for promotion. Because of our disciplinary expertise,…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, College Faculty, Academic Rank (Professional), Writing Instruction
Jonathan Miles Hubbell – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This dissertation explores the experiences of women transitioning from faculty roles to high-level administrative positions within four-year postsecondary institutions in the United States. Utilizing a phenomenological approach, this study investigates the strategies, challenges, and successes of nine women who have navigated this career…
Descriptors: Faculty, Academic Rank (Professional), Faculty Promotion, Women Administrators
Knepper, Hillary J.; Scutelnicu, Gina; Tekula, Rebecca – Journal of Public Affairs Education, 2020
This study is the first to examine the research productivity of public administration faculty by gender through the perceptions of full-time faculty members at NASPAA-accredited schools. It specifically examines how research productivity varies by gender according to faculty tenure status and academic rank. This study extends previous research by…
Descriptors: Public Administration, Public Administration Education, College Faculty, Educational Research
Priddie, Christen; Palmer, Dajanae; Silberstein, Samantha; BrckaLorenz, Allison – To Improve the Academy, 2022
While much of the quantitative research on Black women faculty has taken a comparative approach to understanding their experiences, this study provides a counternarrative, centering their experiences as faculty. This large-scale, multi-institution glance at Black women faculty helps to give us an overview of these women across the country, looking…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Females, Women Faculty, College Faculty
Muradoglu, Melis; Horne, Zachary; Hammond, Matthew D.; Leslie, Sarah-Jane; Cimpian, Andrei – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2022
Feeling like an impostor is common among successful individuals, but particularly among women and early-career professionals. Here, we investigated how gender and career-stage differences in impostor feelings vary as a function of the contexts that academics have to navigate. In particular, we focused on a powerful but underexplored contextual…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Women Faculty, Disproportionate Representation, Teacher Attitudes