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Ward, Kelly; Wolf-Wendel, Lisa – New Directions for Higher Education, 2016
This chapter explores how mid-career tenured women faculty, who are mothers and academics, manage multiple roles. The women represent faculty at a variety of institutional types and in a variety of disciplines. The chapter looks at these experiences in light of ideal worker norms.
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Tenure, College Faculty, Family Work Relationship
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Sallee, Margaret; Ward, Kelly; Wolf-Wendel, Lisa – Innovative Higher Education, 2016
This article is based on data from two qualitative studies that examined the experiences of 93 tenure-line faculty members who are also mothers and fathers. Using gender schemas and ideal worker norms as a guide, we examined the pressures that professors experience amid unrealistic expectations in their work and home lives. Women participants…
Descriptors: Tenure, College Faculty, Gender Differences, Gender Issues
Morphew, Christopher; Ward, Kelly; Wolf-Wendel, Lisa – Council of Independent Colleges, 2016
This report provides empirical evidence about specific trends in faculty staffing, roles, and responsibilities at smaller private liberal arts institutions in the United States, with a focus on the more than 600 four-year colleges and universities that are members of the Council of Independent Colleges. It also addresses how the changing…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Liberal Arts, College Faculty, Surveys
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Wolf-Wendel, Lisa; Ward, Kelly – Innovative Higher Education, 2015
In this article we explore the role of academic discipline on the careers of tenure-line faculty women with children. Longitudinal, qualitative findings show that disciplinary contexts and ideal worker norms shape what it means to be an academic and a mother. Even after achieving tenure, ideal worker norms affect these roles; professional…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Womens Studies, Mothers, Tenure
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Eddy, Pamela L.; Ward, Kelly – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2015
Casual observers of academic environments might conclude that women's problems in higher education have been resolved. Colleges enroll more women than men on an overall basis. There is gender parity in entry-level faculty hires, and the number of women in senior administrative positions continues to rise. A closer look however at the work, lives,…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Womens Education, Womens Studies, Higher Education
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Wolf-Wendel, Lisa; Ward, Kelly; Twombly, Susan B. – Community College Review, 2007
This article explores the dynamics of how female faculty members at 2-year colleges balance the demands of their faculty jobs with motherhood. Results suggest that the community college appears to be a place that offers women the opportunity to balance their interests in teaching at the postsecondary level with the demands of having a family. This…
Descriptors: Females, Women Faculty, Community Colleges, College Faculty
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Wolf-Wendel, Lisa Ellen; Ward, Kelly – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2006
This paper explores the interface between work and family at different types of institutions from the perspective of women faculty who are on the tenure track and who are mothers of young children. Such a perspective provides insight into institutional variation on academic life in general, and for new faculty as mothers in particular. A macro…
Descriptors: Institutional Characteristics, Women Faculty, Tenure, Mothers
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Ward, Kelly; Wolf-Wendel, Lisa – Academe, 2004
Biological and tenure clocks have the unfortunate tendency to tick loudly, clearly, and at the same time. The average age at which faculty earn the PhD is thirty-four, putting the tenure decision at about age forty, just when a woman's fertility is in serious decline. As more women enter the academic profession as assistant professors, more of…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Personnel Policy, College Faculty, Women Faculty
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Ward, Kelly; Wolf-Wendel, Lisa E. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2005
Having a child creates priorities, adds perspective, and helps women to be clear about what they can do (and what they are willing to do) to succeed as a faculty member.
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Mothers, Family Work Relationship, Research Universities
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Ward, Kelly; Wolf-Wendel, Lisa – Review of Higher Education, 2004
Given the prevalence of women faculty entering the profession, many of childbearing age, it is important to understand how women juggle the often-conflicting demands of children and tenure. Interviews with 29 faculty from research universities find them reporting joy in their professional and personal roles, the "greedy" nature of academic and…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Research Universities, Teaching (Occupation), Tenure
Bensimon, Estela Mara; Ward, Kelly; Sanders, Karla – 2000
This book is designed to help department chairs with three stages of junior faculty socialization: recruitment and hiring; the critical first year; and evaluating the performance of new faculty. The book is organized in three parts with 15 chapters. Chapters in Part 1, "Managing the Recruitment and Selection of New Faculty," include: (1)…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Beginning Teacher Induction, Beginning Teachers, College Faculty