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Adao, Aileen Gendrano – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Because the dominant narrative in the media around teachers is fixated on the burnout and unhappiness they are experiencing, this dissertation study explored the joy female Critical Teachers of Color experienced while teaching during the COVID-19 global pandemic. In this qualitative study, I employed both autoethnography and portraitures as a way…
Descriptors: Females, Women Faculty, Teaching Experience, Minority Group Teachers
Tonja Michelle Simmons Lee – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Black feminist thought (BFT) was used in this study to explore the lived experiences of tenured black women counselor educators at historically White institutions. The study employed BFT to understand better how they positively navigated their experiences. The analysis identified three primary themes and nine subthemes, exemplifying how Black…
Descriptors: African Americans, Feminism, Counselor Educators, Tenure
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Georgina Tuari Stewart; Nesta Devine; Chris Jenkin; Yo Heta-Lensen; Lisa Maurice-Takerei; Margaret Joan Stuart; Sue Middleton – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Catalysed by conversations amongst a group of colleagues, this article is an initial exploration of what happens to women academics aged 60+ who work in a university in Aotearoa New Zealand. This work is an example of when academic theories, in this case feminism, are called forth by real-world experiences - in this case, increasing academic job…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Older Adults, Females, Older Workers
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Mary G. Clasquin-Johnson; Hasina B. Ebrahim – South African Journal of Education, 2024
In light of the devastating effects of COVID-19 on early childhood care and education (ECCE), with this study we aimed at illuminating the self-efficacy and well-being of ECCE teacher educators, from the perspective of 9 participants in 7 higher education institutions (HEIs) across 5 South African provinces. The study, conducted by 2 ECCE teacher…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Well Being, Women Faculty, Teacher Educators
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Kaylianne Aploon-Zokufa – South African Journal of Childhood Education, 2024
Background: South African narratives of and by early childhood development (ECD) practitioners often focus on policies, practices and perspectives in research. While these are important for the development of the field, the voices of ECD practitioners, in this marginalised space, are silent. Aim: This article aims to understand: Who are the ECD…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Teachers, Poverty, Blacks
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Livesay, Karen; Walter, Ruby; Petersen, Sacha; Zhao, Lin – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2022
The nursing workforce constitutes the largest professional health workforce in Australia. Nursing is traditionally a female dominated profession. This study reviewed Australian universities that provide entry to practice nursing education. The study identified the distribution of females and males in leadership in nursing education, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical School Faculty, Women Faculty, Nursing Education
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Phillips, Matthew J.; Dzidic, Peta L.; Castell, Emily L. – SAGE Open, 2022
Academia has been characterized as traditional, hierarchical, and selective, founded on patriarchal, imperial, and colonial values that construct and maintain gendered roles and regulations. This has been proposed to disadvantage how women experience, and identify within, academia. A narrative review was conducted to review the literature on…
Descriptors: Females, Professional Identity, Higher Education, Women 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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Bellara, Aarti P.; McCoach, D. Betsy – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2022
We tell the story of how our friendship, which led to our co-teaching, was a catalyst for us to navigate the shift to working from home amid a pandemic. Using a co-constructed autoethnography, we narrate how the loss of our physical workspaces was a detriment to our professional identities, and how through our co-teaching efforts, we were able to…
Descriptors: Friendship, Team Teaching, Collegiality, Educational Change
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Nganga, Christine; Williams Brown, Kimberly; Beck, Makini; De Four-Babb, Joyanne – Educational Forum, 2022
In this article, the authors explore how their intersectional identities as Black immigrant/immigrant descendent women academics inform their research epistemologies in relation to who they are, what they research, and how they perform research. Through the intersections of race, migration, gender, and class they explore four key themes: (1)…
Descriptors: Intersectionality, Epistemology, Feminism, African American Teachers
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Marjoris Regus; Kate R. Fitzpatrick; Sean Grier – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2025
This descriptive collective case study explored the experiences of three Black women music educators through the framework of community cultural wealth. Analysis of data collected through Seidman's three-stage phenomenological interview model revealed three themes. The first, "path to teaching," represented the formative experiences that…
Descriptors: Females, Women Faculty, African American Teachers, Teaching Experience
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Autumn A. Griffin; Latrice Ferguson; Angela Crawford; Ebony Elizabeth Thomas – Reading Teacher, 2025
Teachers' choices as they select texts have long been explored and considered by researchers. However, within such scholarship, there is limited research about how teachers, particularly Black women teachers, navigate the gauntlet of whitewashed standards, hegemonic curriculs, and dehumanizing school spaces to select texts that affirm students and…
Descriptors: Reading Material Selection, Selection Criteria, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods
Kathleen Allen – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This is a story about some of the women of Cornell University who became an integral part of the nature study movement during the years from 1880-1930. The Nature Study movement's aim was to bring children and rural citizens back into a deeper relationship with nature. It is an important precursor to our contemporary environmental movements. Using…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Historical Interpretation, Environmental Education, Biographies
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Danielle Bessett; Laura Dudley Jenkins; Katherine Castiello Jones; Amy Koshoffer; Amber Burkett Peplow; Stephanie Sadre-Orafai; Valerie Weinstein – Journal of Faculty Development, 2021
How can colleges and universities increase the number of women full professors? Criteria and expectations for promotion need more scholarly scrutiny. Through a game-based study, women associate professors from arts, humanities, social science, and STEM fields at a public urban research-1 university categorized different aspects of promotion…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Faculty Promotion, Criteria
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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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