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Petri Salo; Susanne Francisco; Anette Olin Almqvist – Professional Development in Education, 2024
Based on an overview of the existing literature, this paper aims to provide a holistic and coherent conceptualisation and understanding of the complexity of educators' professional learning. First, the way in which professional development, professional learning and everyday learning have been configured in contemporary research is combined with…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Educational Theories, Power Structure, Trust (Psychology)
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Ansgar Allen – Oxford Review of Education, 2025
This paper considers the consequences of 'The Death of the Author', a short essay by Roland Barthes, for educational thought. Seeking to avoid a co-option of Barthes to the work of educational redemption, Barthes' essay is considered in terms of its more disturbing implications. In particular, the parallel question of 'The Death of the Teacher' is…
Descriptors: Teachers, Epistemology, Student Empowerment, Active Learning
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Sell, Andrea J. – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2023
This paper provides a review of the contextual factors that are associated with levels of morale and job satisfaction in academic institutions. It argues that universities can purposefully create workplace environments that support employee well-being by measuring, attending to, and addressing levels of collegiality; designing policies that…
Descriptors: Morale, College Faculty, School Personnel, Job Satisfaction
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Avraamidou, Lucy; Schwartz, Renee – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
Our purpose in this paper is to put forward an argument about both the need and the value for understanding how the constructs of science identity and the nature of science (NOS) might intersect and intertwine and offer useful insights about science participation in times of crises. Based on our knowledge and understanding of these two research…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Scientists, Aspiration, Social Justice
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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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Jonatan Nästesjö – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2025
This paper investigates how early career academics interpret and respond to institutional demands structured by projectification. Developing a 'frame analytic' approach, it explores projectification as a process constituted at the level of meaning-making. Building on 35 in-depth interviews with fixed-term scholars in political science and history,…
Descriptors: Postdoctoral Education, Graduate Students, Political Science, History Instruction
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Low, Remy – Critical Studies in Education, 2023
How do we style ourselves and others as scholars in the field of critical education? What parts of ourselves and others do we regard as salient (or not) in our accounts? And what are the forces that underlie such decisions? In this article, I submit that secularisation is a persistent epistemic and ontological condition that shapes the study of…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Buddhism, Critical Theory, Epistemology
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Digby, Joan – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2020
Patricia J. Smith's argument for professionalism based on Caplow's outdated model is inappropriate for honors administration. The steps outlined are misleading, and the use of the perennially controversial Basic Characteristics as a prescription for professionalizing honors is historically inaccurate and has no place in framing the future of…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Professional Recognition, Occupations, Ethics
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Fazioli, K. Patrick – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2020
Patricia J. Smith's essay on the professionalization of honors advances several original and provocative arguments that deserve serious consideration. Although Smith makes a plausible case that honors has fulfilled at least three of Theodore Caplow's four stages of professionalization, a closer reading of this text reveals that the developments…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Professional Recognition, Educational Development, Occupations
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Zubizarreta, John – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2020
This essay responds to an argument for certification based on a particular sociological theory of professionalization. The case for certification rests on the supposition that honors has evolved from a nascent educational movement focused on distinct teaching and learning approaches for high-ability students to one that is now ready to…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Certification, Professional Recognition, Occupations
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Scott McLean – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
For over forty years, presidents of the Summer School Association of Queen's University wrote annually to teachers across Canada, encouraging them to attend summer courses for credit toward a bachelor of arts. In the 1920s, presidents' messages associated attendance with societal progress and the professionalization of teaching. In the 1930s, such…
Descriptors: Educational History, Summer Schools, Universities, Foreign Countries
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Henington, Carlen; Carlson, Cindy; DeMers, Stephen T. – School Psychology, 2020
In this special issue, Conoley et al. (2020) repeat the call for a paradigm shift in school psychology graduate education from the individual level to the system level and from secondary and tertiary intervention to primary prevention and implementation science to optimize environments for children's overall health and success. This article…
Descriptors: School Psychology, School Psychologists, Counselor Training, Credentials
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Stajic, Janet – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2020
The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Worker/Practitioner (A&TSIHW) workforce provides not only clinical skills but also responds to specific social and cultural needs of the communities they serve bringing knowledge derived from lived and embodied knowledges. The A&TSIHW is a recognised health professional within the Australian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Personnel, Health Personnel
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Smith, Patricia Joanne – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2020
Honors education in America has undergone a process that sociologist Theodore Caplow describes as professionalization. Caplow identifies four stages whereby a developing profession transitions to a professional association: organizing membership, changing the name of occupation from its previous status, developing a code of ethics, and after a…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Professional Recognition, Occupations, Specialization
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Sheena J. Vachhani; Emma Bell – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
In this paper we move from considering the chair as an (inanimate) object, to exploring its vitality through a more vibrant and active reading of this inescapable everyday item. We are inspired by feminist new materialism and how affect shapes our understanding of matter. Reading matter in this way surfaces our orientations toward everyday items…
Descriptors: Department Heads, Foreign Countries, Status, Professional Recognition
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