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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Satoko Suzuki – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2025
This article examines how female L1-Japanese professors who teach Japanese language and culture on U.S. campuses present their identity in interviews. An analysis of their narratives reveals that they employed various tactics of intersubjectivity, and presented themselves in complex and strategic ways. Their multiple grounds of identity (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Japanese, Self Concept
Taru Julia Kimura – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Women comprise half of the world's population but less than half of the paid workforce, less than half of organized workers, and far less than half of union leadership positions. Women benefit from union membership by enjoying a smaller gender wage gap than women without union representation. Unionized teachers enjoy higher salaries and better…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Women Faculty, Employed Women
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Nancy Teresi Truett; Frances A. Alimigbe; Victoria Suarez – Commission for International Adult Education, 2023
Adult learners globally face a multitude of challenges in learning and obtaining educational degrees. This can be due to a variety of reasons including academic stress, as well as additional responsibilities with managing families, childcare, household duties, careers, and jobs. Different cultures may face unique barriers in education; however,…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Students, Barriers, Cultural Differences
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Lackovic, Nataša; Popova, Biliana – Learning, Media and Technology, 2021
Lectures prevail as a ubiquitous teaching and learning method across universities worldwide. Whereas lectures have been conceptualized from language-centred perspectives, lectures' materiality as linked to their socio-cultural and historical meanings have been scarcely explored. To address this gap, we tackle the materiality of communication in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Lecture Method, College Faculty, Universities
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Kimura, Julia – PASAA: Journal of Language Teaching and Learning in Thailand, 2018
If you are reading this, as a child, you probably went to school to learn. However, as we enter adulthood, we do a great deal of learning informally after we have completed compulsory and formal schooling. Although early theories of learning fell under the quantitative paradigm, new qualitative and social theories of learning have now been…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Learning Theories, Second Language Learning, Social Theories
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Makaiau, Amber Strong; Ragoonaden, Karen; Leng, Lu; Mangram, Charmaine; Toyoda, Mitsuyo – Studying Teacher Education, 2019
This article explores how five international colleagues from the USA, Canada, China, and Japan use self-study methodologies and online journaling to systematically examine the tensions surrounding the lived experiences of feminist academics in diverse global contexts. It draws from the theoretical foundations of critical qualitative inquiry,…
Descriptors: Feminism, Journal Writing, Faculty Development, Multicultural Education
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Nonaka, Chisato – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2020
As the 2020 Tokyo Olympics approached (though now tentatively postponed to 2021), Japan stepped up on its nationwide "kokusaika" ("internationalization") campaign to prepare for the big moment. This frenzied internationalization movement is not a new trend for Japan, particularly in the education sector where since the 1980s,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Women Faculty, Foreign Countries, International Education
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Aiston, Sarah Jane; Jung, Jisun – Gender and Education, 2015
In the prestige economy of higher education, research productivity is highly prized. Previous research indicates, however, a gender gap with respect to research output. This gap is often explained by reference to familial status and responsibilities. In this article, we examine the research productivity gender gap from an international perspective…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Productivity, Cross Cultural Studies, Gender Differences
Akashi, Ai; Tsuji, Nobuhiro – Australian Association for Research in Education, 2015
This study examined how Japanese female primary school teachers who have continued to study physical education (PE) perceive gender consciousness. The other, more important, purpose of this study was to demonstrate factors that enhance teachers' commitment to study PE and their development processes and its effect on their teaching careers. Using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Women Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
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Morley, Louise – Higher Education Research and Development, 2014
Drawing on data gathered from British Council seminars in Hong Kong, Tokyo and Dubai on "Absent Talent: Women in Research and Academic Leadership" (2012-2013), this paper discusses academic women's experiences and explanations for women's under-representation as knowledge leaders and producers in the global academy. Participants from…
Descriptors: Women Administrators, Women Faculty, Instructional Leadership, Females
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Huang, Yueh-Chun; Yang, Cheng-Cheng; Wu, Huan-Hung – International Education Studies, 2012
In 2008, OECD released one multi-national report about one important survey of its twenty-two member countries, the title of this report is "Improving School Leadership: Volume 1 Policy and Practice". This report analyzed one specific common trend of its members, which is the "unique gender divide among school principals and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cross Cultural Studies, Principals, Teachers
McNeill, David – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Japan's higher-education system is the second largest in the world, after the United States, but it fares much worse than the United States when it comes to gender equity. Just 7 percent of Japan's 750-odd colleges and universities are run by women, compared with 23 percent of those in the United States. While four out of the eight members of the…
Descriptors: Females, Foreign Countries, Sex Fairness, Women Administrators
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Wheeler, Helen Rippier – Journal of the National Association of Women Deans, Administrators, and Counselors, 1985
Discusses the backgrounds and current status of Women's Studies in Japan today. Research on which it is based was conducted while the author was visiting scholar and guest lecturer in Women's Studies at Toyo University in Tokyo in spring and summer 1984. (Author)
Descriptors: Educational History, Feminism, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Altbach, Philip G., Ed. – 1978
Essays include: gentlemen and players, the changing British professoriate (Gareth Williams); the robed baron, the academic profession in the Italian university (Guido Martinotti, Alberto Giasanti); the changing role of the Japanese professor (William K. Cummings, Ikuo Amano); academic staff and academic drift in Australian colleges of advanced…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Hastings, Sally A. – International Journal of Social Education, 1991
Describes the contributions of three women educators to Japanese education and to the development of the modern Japanese empire. Criticizes Japanese historiography that ignores the role of conservative women. Discusses the educators' views of the importance of female education to help women raise children who could benefit the state. (DK)
Descriptors: Confucianism, Educational History, Educational Innovation, Educational Philosophy
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