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Rusman, Ellen; Storm, Jeroen – International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning, 2022
Novice teachers are often discouraged by the problems they encounter in their daily professional practices and they (still) feel unable to cope with. This is also reflected in high drop-out rates in the early stages of teachers' careers. In this paper a theory-informed methodology to support novice teachers' individual and collective professional…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Novices, Faculty Development, Individual Development
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Schulte, Marthann – Journal of Continuing Higher Education, 2016
Working at a distance brings several benefits, often offset by several detriments. One aspect of working at a distance is the difficulty in sharing successes and promoting accolades. These successes may be personal, team, program, or institutional. But, as a distance worker it can seem daunting or even futile when attempting to "toot your own…
Descriptors: Success, Awards, Conferences (Gatherings), Professional Development
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Follins, Lourdes D.; Paler, Lisa K.; Nanin, Jose E. – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2015
This article describes the creation and implementation of a faculty interest group for historically underrepresented faculty at a large, urban community college in the Northeast. Faculty interest groups provide opportunities for faculty across disciplines to meet to explore common interests and share concerns and best practices. The faculty…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Group Dynamics, Minority Group Teachers, African American Teachers
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Keim, Jeanmarie; McDermott, J. Cynthia – Educational Forum, 2010
Incidents of workplace violence are becoming all too common at colleges and universities. Generally, one thinks of shootings and assaults in relation to campus workplace violence. However, mobbing and bullying of faculty by other faculty are types of workplace violence that, while very common, are rarely discussed or reported. This article raises…
Descriptors: Colleges, Campuses, Work Environment, College Faculty
DuFour, Rick – Phi Delta Kappan, 2011
Attempts to promote collaboration among teachers conflict with a long tradition of teacher isolation. Defenders of this isolation often argue that such collaboration should be voluntary. However, because the preponderance of evidence suggests that collaboration is better than isolation, professionalism demands that all teachers be required to…
Descriptors: Teacher Collaboration, Professional Isolation, School Culture, Professional Autonomy
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Klausman, Jeffrey – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2010
Several years ago, when his college first financed a writing program administrator (WPA) position--reassigned time and a budget to pay adjunct faculty stipends for program development--the author met with all the most senior adjunct faculty. "Without you," he told them, "this effort to build a better writing program won't work. Participation and…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, Writing Instruction, Program Development, Administrator Effectiveness
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White, Brian – English Education, 2011
Educational researchers are accustomed to institutional review board (IRB) requirements (e.g., protecting participants) with students often identified as the only "vulnerable population" for IRB purposes. However, as practitioner research has gained more prominence, the vulnerability of teacher-researchers themselves has begun to…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Educational Research, Teacher Researchers, Teacher Motivation
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Hord, Shirley M. – Journal of Staff Development, 2007
Studying one's profession, especially when done in community with others, where the learning is richer and deeper, has not been the norm in the education community. Educators typically have been physically isolated from each other because of the structure of school facilities and the schedules that dominate the school day. This physical isolation…
Descriptors: Social Environment, Faculty Development, Interprofessional Relationship, Interaction
Thornburgh, John K. – Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, 2007
Few chief executive positions rival today's academic presidency in the complexity, unpredictability, and stress-producing nature of the job. This article describes how board members can sustain the well-being of those who hold down today's demanding academic presidencies. Initiatives boards can consider include: (1) appropriate personal staff; (2)…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Administrator Role, Board Administrator Relationship, Well Being
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Ng, Cheuk Fan – International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, 2006
Research in distance and online education has focused on how to improve students' learning and support services. Faculty satisfaction, as one of the five pillars in Sloan-Consortium's quality framework for online education, has received less attention in research. Besides online teaching, little research has examined the experiences of academics…
Descriptors: Teleworking, Distance Education, Recruitment, Online Courses
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Gorrell, Lorraine – Initiatives, 1996
Account of one woman's climb to full professorship after over 20 years of teaching. Greeted with an icy reception at a midsize southern college, this Ivy League graduate was reluctantly hired in 1973. Recounts various specific instances of sex discrimination endured by the only full-time female professional in the music department. (LSR)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Faculty College Relationship, Females
Wetherington, Patricia Reish – 1996
Because of the difficulty of finding time for professional and personal development, many family child care (FCC) providers are isolated in their work environment. This practicum study developed a provider-initiated support network to reduce this isolation. The local FCC association provided advertising about the formation of the network. A group…
Descriptors: Caregiver Attitudes, Child Care Occupations, Child Caregivers, Day Care
Lindsay, Sandra R.; Halfacre, John D.; Welch, Frances C. – Principal Leadership, 2004
Principals can easily validate the tension of opposites thinking. Their work is filled with paradoxical dilemmas and days in which the questions are complex and void of definitive answers. In an attempt to balance the often antithetical needs and expectations of the students, the faculty members, the community, and the district office, the…
Descriptors: Principals, Administrator Role, Conflict Resolution, Faculty