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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results Save | Export
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Jo-Anne Kelder; Joseph Crawford; Ishaq Al Naabi; Loeurt To – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
In higher education, the ability to navigate and function well in a diverse digital ecosystem is now essential to student, academic, and professional flourishing and productivity. Universities had to respond to a pandemic that catapulted face-to-face offerings into online and hybrid environments. More recently, a preference for working from home…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Universities, Leadership Training
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Canan Nese Kinikoglu; Aysegul Can – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2025
Through a phenomenological research design, this study explores experiences of precarity among early-career academics in the UK and the USA higher education sectors. These contexts, while similar, exhibit structural differences as pioneers of neoliberalization in the Global North. Conducting semi-structured interviews with 20 early-career…
Descriptors: Novices, College Faculty, Foreign Countries, Work Environment
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David Duell – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2025
Inter-professional perspective-taking (the ability to take the perspective of colleagues with whom one is working, but who work in a different context or role type) is an aspect of empathy, with substantial benefits in the workplace, including environments where inter-professional collaboration is required, such as clinicians and administrators.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Interprofessional Relationship, Teacher Attitudes
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Nathan Archer – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
Following calls to 'bewilder' (Snaza 2013) the pioneers of early education, this article positions Montessori pedagogy as a 'desire path' that acts as resistance to normative policy-driven pathways in early childhood education and care. Desire paths are alternative tracks made aside from officially established walking routes. In this paper I think…
Descriptors: Montessori Method, Early Childhood Education, Resistance (Psychology), Educational Policy
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Bacova, Daniela; Turner, Amanda – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic brought unexpected challenges to the lives and professional practice of teachers regardless of their institutional context. Our understanding of how teachers viewed their impact on their perceived sense of professional identity is largely unexplored, especially concerning teachers working in the post-compulsory sector. This…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Work Environment, Teacher Attitudes, COVID-19
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Mulholland, Kirstin; Nichol, David; Gillespie, Aidan – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2023
In exploring imposter feelings in early career academics, this article examines the impacts of adopting social constructivist pedagogies. It reveals the significance of reflective practice in a Post-Graduate Certificate in Academic Practice programme (PGCAP), supporting professional development in teaching, learning and assessment for new…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Beginning Teachers, Beginning Teacher Induction, Foreign Countries
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Erickson, Mark; Hanna, Paul; Walker, Carl – Studies in Higher Education, 2021
In this paper, we present results from an extensive survey of United Kingdom (UK) university academics investigating satisfaction with senior managers and university governance: the Senior Management Survey (SMS). In total, 5888 academic staff across the United Kingdom Higher Education (HE) sector completed the survey, and results were used to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Administration, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
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Bailey, Wayne; Bordogna, Claudia M.; Harvey, Halina; Jones, Glynn; Walton, Sean – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2021
Using a bi-dimensional, fourfold model as a thinking tool to contemplate acculturation strategies we analyse the intercultural experience of international academic staff (IAS) in the United Kingdom higher education. The literature suggests that IAS feel undervalued as a professional group and that institutions do not capitalise on their diverse…
Descriptors: Acculturation, College Faculty, Foreign Nationals, Higher Education
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Shackleton, Nichola; Bonell, Chris; Jamal, Farah; Allen, Elizabeth; Mathiot, Anne; Elbourne, Diana; Viner, Russell – Journal of School Health, 2019
Background: Teachers report higher levels of stress than most occupational groups. Burnout is a specific psychological condition that results from chronic job stress characterized by emotional exhaustion, low personal accomplishment, and depersonalization. This study considers associations between aspects of the school environment and teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Burnout, Stress Variables, Educational Environment, Work Environment
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Green, Francis – Oxford Review of Education, 2021
I analyse trends in teachers' job quality in Britain, using the framework of the European Foundation for Living and Working Conditions, with data from the British Skills and Employment Survey. The issue of increasing concern is not work hours, which have remained long but stable; rather, teachers are working considerably more intensively than in…
Descriptors: Trend Analysis, Teaching Conditions, Work Environment, Teacher Attitudes
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Rickett, Bridgette; Morris, Anna – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2021
Previous research exploring how working-class women experience UK Higher Education (HE) work has made evident recurring themes around social segregation and corresponding difficulties with feeling they belong. This paper develops this work by exploring the ways in which UK, HE based working-class women lecturers talk about their sense of…
Descriptors: Working Class, College Faculty, Women Faculty, Higher Education
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Ashencaen Crabtree, Sara; Esteves, Luciana; Hemingway, Ann – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2021
In March 2020 virtually all UK universities were suddenly thrown into an unprecedented and sudden closure of campus and facilities owing to the British Government's COVID-19 pandemic lockdown policies. Further evidence suggests that this exacerbated existing gendered differences. This paper reports on UK academic responses from an international…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, COVID-19
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Ozer, Omer – European Education, 2022
This cross-national comparative study examined "internationalization" and "quality" in the English and Turkish higher education (HE) sectors, thereby presenting a comparative discussion of the state of HE in the two countries. Using a phenomenological approach, the study generated qualitative and quantitative data from…
Descriptors: International Education, Educational Quality, Comparative Education, Cross Cultural Studies
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Oldfield, Jeremy; Ainsworth, Steph – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2022
The teacher retention crisis has led to a strong discourse around the need for teachers to 'build their resilience', which places the responsibility for coping at the feet of the individual teacher. Contemporary research, however, supports a social-ecological approach, which takes account of environmental influences within the resilience process.…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Teacher Persistence, Risk, Context Effect
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Burnard, Pamela; Dragovic, Tatjana; Ottewell, Karen; Lim, Wai Mun – London Review of Education, 2018
Although there is increasing interest in how learning to become a researching professional is understood by students undertaking a professional doctorate of education (EdD), the topic remains under-researched and under-theorized. In this article, we provide a set of theorizations, starting with the purpose and distinctiveness of the professional…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Doctoral Degrees, Foreign Countries, Graduate Students
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