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Socorro Morales; Tanya J. Gaxiola Serrano; Van T. Lac – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2024
In this essay, the authors who identify as Women of Color (a Chicana, a Latina, and a Southeast Asian woman, respectively) faculty theorize their experiences with white resistance when teaching about race and racism in higher education. Drawing from Critical Race Theory, we merge our collective experiences of teaching about race into a composite…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, College Faculty, Minority Group Teachers, Teaching Experience
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Miso Kim; Eunjeong Lee – TESOL Journal, 2024
This duoethnography traces two transnational woman teacher-scholars' translanguaging pedagogies for equitable language and literacy education. Research on translanguaging has highlighted how lived experiences of transnational language and literacy educators crucially shape their language ideology, and professional identities and pedagogical…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Language Usage, Equal Education, Literacy Education
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Kajsa Widegren; Susanna Young Håkansson; Bo Jarneving – European Journal of Higher Education, 2024
Gendered bias in peer-review and other forms of assessments is a well-studied area. But how do researchers actually execute their positions of power in recruitment processes? In Sweden, recruitment for academic tenure and the reviewers' reports are public and thus open for scrutiny. This study uses both bibliographic coupling and close reading of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Faculty Recruitment, Gender Bias, Tenure
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Hilton, Gillian L. S. – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2023
This paper explores the move towards an all-female teaching force, particularly in the developed world, where men are turning their backs on the profession. It attempts to gather the evidence as to what is affecting men's choice to reject teaching as a career. It explores the possible causes of this change, which has been increasing over the last…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Females, Women Faculty, Sex Stereotypes
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Locke, Kirsten; McChesney, Katrina – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
Hélène Cixous is perhaps best known for her paper, 'The Laugh of the Medusa' (1976) and her literary contributions outside academia. In this paper, we pick up a lesser known Cixous text, 'Le Sexe ou la tête?' that offers an interesting and provocative perspective on the traps associated with being feminine in a masculine environment. As we…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Females, Femininity, College Faculty
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Norden, Martin F. – Film Education Journal, 2022
Dorothy Arzner is best remembered as one of the exceptionally few women to direct feature films during Hollywood's 'golden age'. One of the lesser known dimensions of her career is her work as a film-making teacher in southern California during a time of great change in the ways that US-based film-makers learnt their craft. During the 1950s and…
Descriptors: Film Production, Females, Films, Film Study
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Grant, Barbara M. – Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences, 2023
The traditional master-apprentice architecture of doctoral supervision is undoubtedly undergoing change. In the anglophone world, the father's house of supervision with its almost exclusively male occupants was first established in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It persisted, largely undisputed, until the final decades of the…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Supervision, Gender Bias, Women Administrators
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Rachel Rosenberg – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
This paper explores the movement of the New York City Interborough Association of Women Teachers (IAWT) for "equal pay for equal work" in teaching salaries, which it won in 1911. The IAWT's success sheds light on the possibilities and limits of women teachers advocating for change within a feminized profession. Leading the movement were…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Salary Wage Differentials, Sex Fairness
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Hey, Valerie; Leaney, Sarah; Leyton, Daniel – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2021
"Class Matters," by Mahony and Zmroczek (1997), was an important collection marking working-class women's contribution to the academy and society. In taking up the question of class, this paper considers the ways in which a partial and particular discourse reflected its author's material circumstances, including her preferred conceptual…
Descriptors: Working Class, Autobiographies, Identification (Psychology), Discourse Analysis
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Shahjahan, Riyad A.; Bhangal, Naseeb K.; Ema, Tasnim A. – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2023
This article seeks to decentre the Global North knowledge production about 'work-life balance' (WLB) in academia by applying a temporal gaze to illuminate WLB possibilities in Bangladeshi academia where institutional WLB policies are absent. Drawing on Adam's (2008) timescapes and Flaherty's (2002) time work concepts, we focus on Bangladeshi women…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Women Faculty, Family Work Relationship, College Faculty
Mabruk Kabir – UNICEF Innocenti - Global Office of Research and Foresight, 2024
Botswana will need to invest in human capital and strengthen its skills base to transition into a knowledge-based economy. However, low foundational learning levels remain a key challenge for the education sector. While Botswana has invested heavily in teacher supply, teacher deployment has not always reflected school-level teacher needs. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Distribution, Teacher Student Ratio, Geographic Distribution
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Goldstein, Amir; Hager, Tamar – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2022
This article focuses on Aliza Levenberg, an educator who taught at a Kiryat Shmona high school at the beginning of the 1960s. For three years Levenberg, a middle class Western European, travelled every week from her home in Tel Aviv to the poor town in the northern periphery of Israel, the inhabitants of which were mainly immigrants from Islamic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High School Teachers, Culture Conflict, Activism
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Moratti, Sofia – Gender and Education, 2020
Various metaphors are used in the literature and media to refer to the careers and experiences of women academics. In the wake of the fascinating debate in the literature surrounding the adequacy of these expressions, considerable effort has been devoted to the pursuit of 'the ideal metaphor': one that is comprehensible, inclusive, intersectional,…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Women Faculty, Discourse Analysis, Gender Issues
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Minkyung Choi – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2023
Women faculty in higher education, and particularly BIPOC women faculty in community colleges, often bear the weight of emotional labor, or the expectation of managing both their feelings as well as their students' emotional needs. Because emotional labor goes unrecognized, this places a strain on faculty who balance teaching, research, and…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, College Faculty, Females, Minority Group Teachers
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Campbell, Shanyce L. – Educational Forum, 2022
Using a chronicle, this paper examines teacher evaluation systems to highlight how neoliberal reforms produce unjust conditions for both teachers and students of color. I specifically center Black women and their ways of knowing to provide a (re)imagining around what is possible when educational leaders move beyond reforms to create a system that…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Neoliberalism, Educational Change, Minority Group Teachers
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