Shadows and Light: Professional Women Educators Transitioning to Academe

IF 1.2 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Research in Education Pub Date : 2022-06-16 DOI:10.37119/ojs2022.v27i2a.523
Candy Skyhar, A. Farrell
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Abstract

Many professional women educators make the transition from school settings to academe after significant graduate work in their field(s). This transition, which often occurs on a mid- to late-career trajectory, places such individuals within liminal spaces on many levels as they inevitably must navigate unfamiliar, often alien, territory that frequently does not recognize or respect the experiences with which they enter their new university contexts. The collaborative autoethnographic study we embarked upon involved examining our own experiences of making this transition. By revisiting an academic year’s worth of recorded conversations and analyzing them through an ecofeminist lens, we considered the lessons we had learned through engaging in a program renewal process and designing and co-teaching new courses in our first few years as faculty, as well as how these lessons impacted our emerging identities as new teacher educators. Our findings included three broad lessons learned: Beware of Institutionally Invisible Work; This is not High School, Dorothy; and Two Heads and Hearts are One. These lessons taught us to navigate the shadow places (Plumwood, 2008) of academe, including the delegitimization of teaching, nurturing and service work and the dematerialisation (Plumwood, 2008) associated with such delegitimization, and to embrace the light we found rooted in interconnectedness, an ethic of care, and our mutual recognition of the other. Moreover, these lessons offer others in the field ways of understanding the difficult transition to academe undertaken by professional women educators and the complexity of academic/teacher educator identity formation. Keywords: professional women educators, ecofeminist, institutionally invisible work, teacher educator identity, transition to academe, program renewal, collaborative autoethnography, borderland discourse, mutual recognition, shadow places, ethic of care
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阴影与光明:职业女性教育工作者向学术界的过渡
许多职业女性教育工作者在各自领域完成重要的毕业工作后,从学校过渡到学术界。这种转变通常发生在职业生涯的中后期,将这些人置于许多层面的有限空间中,因为他们不可避免地必须在不熟悉的、通常是陌生的领域中航行,这些领域往往不承认或不尊重他们进入新的大学环境时的经历。我们开始进行的合作式的自我民族志研究涉及到我们自己在这一转变过程中的经历。通过回顾一学年的谈话记录,并从生态女权主义的角度对其进行分析,我们思考了我们在担任教师的头几年里通过参与项目更新过程、设计和共同教授新课程中学到的教训,以及这些教训如何影响我们作为新教师教育者的新兴身份。我们的研究结果包括三个广泛的经验教训:谨防制度上看不见的工作;这不是高中,多萝西;两颗脑袋和一颗心是一体的。这些课程教会我们如何在学术的阴影中穿行(Plumwood, 2008),包括教学、培育和服务工作的非合法性,以及与这种非合法性相关的非物质化(Plumwood, 2008),并拥抱我们发现的根植于相互联系、关怀伦理和我们对彼此的相互认可的光明。此外,这些课程为其他领域的人提供了理解职业女性教育工作者向学术过渡的困难以及学术/教师教育工作者身份形成的复杂性的方法。关键词:职业女性教育工作者、生态女性主义、制度隐形工作、教师教育身份、向学术过渡、项目更新、协作自我民族志、边界话语、相互承认、阴影场所、关怀伦理
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来源期刊
Research in Education
Research in Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
9
期刊介绍: Research in Education has an established focus on the sociology and psychology of education and gives increased emphasis to current practical issues of direct interest to those in the teaching profession.
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