Full Description
Although women are performing well academically, are they reaching the heights that their male counterparts are? If not, why not? Practitioner, Professor, Researcher, Reformer: Women's Atypical Stories shows why gender inequalities persist in the academy and beyond.
Jackie Carter and Linda Baines shed light on why women might choose to leave academia, while also asking questions about how to bring lived experience and knowledge transfer into academia from those who chose a different career path initially. Educational structures such as recruitment, promotion and reward have barely changed in the last 100 years. Through a thematic analysis of personal narratives from thirty women the authors examine the structural issues that persist (e.g. care giving as a gendered domain, routes into higher education, elitism within the academy). They argue that to create a workforce that values activism and practitioner experience higher education needs a radical rethink. And to achieve better gender equality, a reform of recruitment and reward in higher education may be long overdue.
Practitioner, Professor, Researcher, Reformer: Women's Atypical Stories is essential reading for researchers and practitioners who want to discover what it means for women to be in and of the academy in the 21st century.
Contents
Chapter 1. Navigating Academia Atypically
Chapter 2. Thirty Atypical Careers
Chapter 3. Subject Knowledge, Skills and Experience from Atypical Careers
Chapter 4. Movers and Shakers Embracing Atypical Careers
Chapter 5. Building Bridges through Atypical Careers
Chapter 6. Why Atypical Careers Matter
Final Reflections and Further Research