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Showing 1 to 15 of 48 results Save | Export
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Vivien McComb; Narelle Eather – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Sessional academic staff form most of the teaching staff cohort in Australian universities. The available literature supports that this important staff cohort often experience precarious and insecure work, restricted access to training, support and development, and limited opportunities for career progression (compared to their colleagues in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adjunct Faculty, Job Security, Faculty Development
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Walsh, Lucas; Gleeson, Joanne – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2022
Workforce insecurity has significant implications for the role of school leaders and teachers preparing students for changing worlds of work. For educators to better prepare students to enter an increasingly casualised labour workforce, there first needs to be an acknowledgement of how students perceive themselves in relation to post-school life.…
Descriptors: Career Education, Secondary School Students, Foreign Countries, Entrepreneurship
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Gander, Michelle – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2023
The psychological contract shapes people's perceptions and behaviours in the workplace through how people perceive and react to feedback from their environment. Little research has been carried out on the psychological contracts of university professional staff and this oversight is particularly problematic due to the impact that the psychological…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Professional Personnel, Expectation, Psychological Patterns
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Skakni, I.; Maggiori, C.; Masdonati, J.; Akkermans, J. – Higher Education Research and Development, 2023
This study examines the extent to which career competencies (knowledge, skills, and abilities necessary to manage one's own work and learning experiences to achieve the desired career progression) are prevalent amongst early career researchers (ECRs). We adapted the Career Competencies Questionnaire [Akkermans, J., Brenninkmeijer, V., Huibers, H.,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Career Development, Competence, Job Skills
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Kirsten Lambert; Christina Gray – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2025
This paper shares data from a longitudinal study into secondary performing arts teachers' perceptions of their first five years of teaching. Utilising Deleuze and Guattari's concept of rhizomatic becomings and Braidotti's posthuman knowing subject, our research explores the embodied, relational, and fluid identities of early career teachers. This…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Theater Arts, Neoliberalism, Foreign Countries
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Spina, Nerida; Smithers, Kathleen; Harris, Jess; Mewburn, Inger – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Despite the diversity of entry points into academia, little research exists examining the experiences and impact of precarious employment at different life stages. Drawing on interviews with 19 academics employed casually or on fixed-term contracts in Australian universities, this paper illustrates how precarious employment is experienced at…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Contracts, College Faculty, Researchers
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Rea, Jeannie – Australian Universities' Review, 2021
The attacks on university staff and students engaged in teaching, researching and speaking out against the state, military and religious powers, and for fairness, democracy, and equality, are increasing. As has been noted by many academics and commentators, liberal democratic principles of free speech and movement, alongside academic freedom, are…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Educational Finance, College Students, Foreign Countries
Gwilym Croucher; Elizabeth Baré; Kenneth Moore – Melbourne Centre for the Study of Higher Education, 2025
The use of casual contract employment has become a prominent feature in higher education institutions worldwide, including the growth of adjunct roles in the United States and fixed-term teaching staff positions in the UK. In Australia, this trend has been a subject of significant controversy and national attention in recent years, as casual…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Adjunct Faculty, Nontenured Faculty
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Tomaszewski, Wojtek; Perales, Francisco; Xiang, Ning; Kubler, Matthias – Research in Higher Education, 2021
Research consistently shows that higher-education participation has positive impacts on individual outcomes. However, few studies explicitly consider differences in these impacts by socio-economic background (SEB), and those which do fail to examine graduate trajectories over the long run, non-labor outcomes and relative returns. We address these…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Background, Advantaged, Disadvantaged, Outcomes of Education
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Smyth, Ciara; Cortis, Natasha; Powell, Abigail – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2021
In 2020, COVID-19 triggered rapid growth in the use of flexible work arrangements (FWA) in universities. While the impacts of this shift are still emerging, this article contributes analysis of the ways university staff experienced FWAs prior to the pandemic. In-depth discussions with sixty staff across eight focus groups highlighted substantial…
Descriptors: Universities, School Personnel, College Faculty, Professional Personnel
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Lambert, Kirsten; Gray, Christina – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
This paper explores the hyper-performative expectations of early career teachers (ECTs) in the context of neoliberal education assemblages. The need to support and retain beginning teachers is a salient issue in the context of troubling rates of teacher attrition. The study explores how ECTs perceive teacher identities in response to national…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Neoliberalism, Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility
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Bush, Timothy Mark – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
This paper will consider how short-term contracts function as a technology for governing a new generation of teachers in Australia. It will proceed from Foucault's understanding that neoliberal modes of power seek to 'guide' or shape the conduct of the governed. In particular, the paper will consider how the short-term contracts implicate…
Descriptors: Job Security, Contracts, Teacher Employment, Foreign Countries
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Alsulami, Naif Daifullah Z. – International Journal of Higher Education, 2020
The purpose of this research is to describe the characteristics of the re-entry experiences of Saudis returning to Saudi Arabia after studying abroad. The total number of participants in the study was 21, consisting of 13 male and 8 female participants returning from studying in the U.S., U.K., and Australia. By conducting semi-structured…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Experience, Study Abroad, Reentry Students
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Bush, Timothy Mark – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2016
In 2014 "almost 80% of all government school teachers in Australia in their first 5 years of their teaching careers were on short-term contracts." This paper will consider how the short-term contract governs early career teachers in Australia, and more broadly, how neo-liberal governance works on and through institutions and individuals.…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Contracts, Foreign Countries, Governance
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Daniel, Ryan – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2016
Despite the challenges associated with the pursuit of a career as an artist, such as job insecurity and an oversupply of labour, many individuals continue to seek a career in this field. Australian artists also face additional challenges, such as geographic isolation from the major art centres of the world, resulting in perceptions of the need to…
Descriptors: Creativity, Artists, Career Choice, Job Security
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