Emissaries: The Overseas Work of the American YWCA, 1895-1970

Keyword(s):  
1959 ◽  
Vol 11 (08) ◽  
pp. 11-12
Author(s):  
H.W. McCobb
Keyword(s):  

ILR Review ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 580-605 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ignacio Bretos ◽  
Anjel Errasti ◽  
Carmen Marcuello

Drawing on qualitative research and longitudinal data on two Mondragon multinational cooperatives, the authors examine the multinational expansion of these co-ops and the diffusion of the cooperative model’s employment practices to their subsidiaries in Brazil, China, Slovakia, France, and Poland. The results show that international expansion can radically transform the organizational architecture of co-ops and exacerbate dilemmas about how to put their hallmark values into practice. Moreover, the findings reveal a fragmented and inconsistent introduction of the cooperative model overseas. Work organization practices are homogeneous across the various sites, whereas job security, training, and pay equity practices are not. Core cooperative practices (i.e., employee participation in ownership, profit sharing, and general management) have not been implemented in any foreign operation. The study illustrates how market influences, institutions, and macro- and micro-politics shape the transfer of employment practices.


2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 237-249
Author(s):  
Bruce Woolley

Capstone courses in undergraduate education, especially in professional schools such as journalism, usually try to teach students to think and perform like the future practitioners they intend to become. Internships, practice-based subjects, work experience courses—they all aim to bridge the students’ knowledge from the largely theoretical to the urgently practical; knowledge that will be essential in the workplace, whether it’s a doctor in a hospital, a lawyer in a courtroom or a teacher in a classroom. Shulman’s ground-breaking insight was to articulate these as Signature Pedagogies and to define them clearly in three dimensions—to think, to perform, and to act with integrity—just as experienced practitioners in the field are doing. This article contends that overseas Work Integrated Learning (WIL) courses such as those examined here, conducted by the researcher for the University of Queensland (UQ), are a Signature Pedagogy because the student participants are required to behave, think and perform ethically, just as foreign correspondents must do.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-72
Author(s):  
Hung Trong Hoang ◽  
Nga Thi Thuy Ho

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate the factors influencing work readjustment of Vietnamese returnees who used to study and/or work in a developed country and are currently working in different positions in their home country. Design/methodology/approach Data for this study were collected through a survey of 433 returnees using both paper-based and online surveys. Multiple regression was used to test the relationships in the model. Findings The findings show that while the length of time spent overseas, work expectations and subjective norm significantly affect work readjustment, the influences of age, gender and length of time since return on work readjustment are not supported. Practical implications The findings provide useful insights for home country government and managers of returnees developing repatriation programs that help returnees deal with the issue of poor work readjustment. Originality/value Empirical studies on cross-cultural re-entry adjustment of both self-initiated repatriates and international students are scarcely investigated. Most prior studies focused on individual factors (such as gender, age, duration in overseas and since return), research on the effect of work expectation on work readjustment is still scant. Most prior studies focused on examining the relationship between work expectation and work readjustment of company repatriates, however, this relationship in the context of returnees, especially in the Asia-Pacific region, has not been investigated. Furthermore, this study is the first to examine the influence of subjective norm on work readjustment of returnees.


1981 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 238-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry J. Fraser

International work involving the measurement and investigation of perceptions of psychosocial characteristics of school classrooms has firmly established classroom learning environment as a thriving field of study. Furthermore Australian educational researchers have made sizable and distinctive contributions to this research effort. This paper provides an overview of overseas work on the development and use of classroom environment instruments, reports normative and validation data from the use of new or modified scales among large Australian samples, and reviews the Australian research in the area. In particular, Australian research has involved predictive validity studies of outcome-environment relationships, use of environment perceptions as criterion variables, investigation of differences between student and teacher perceptions of actual and preferred environment, person-environment fit studies of relationships between student learning and actual-preferred congruence, and practical attempts to facilitate environmental change. Taken together, Australian studies provide much evidence which supports the validity of various classroom environment instruments, which attests to their usefulness as sources of both predictor and criterion variables for a variety of educational research purposes, and which suggests promising new directions for future research.


1972 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 303-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
JAMES A. F. STONER ◽  
JOHN D. ARAM ◽  
IRWIN M. RUBIN

Author(s):  
G.H. Holford

I think you realise that I will be able to give only the merest sketch of a subject of such dimensions as "Grassland Work Overseas". A good deal of it has already been touched upon by Dr Hilgendorf, who has dealt with some of the Overseas Work on Ryegrass selection, so I will just try and bring forward some of the points I think may bear on other phases of grassland work being carried on in New Zealand. After all, we have to recognise that grass is one of the most important factors in human existence, Somebody once said - "After air, light and water, the next most important thing is grass". We know it exists in all lands to some extent, but there is no country in the World so dependent on grass as New Zealand.


BMJ ◽  
2009 ◽  
pp. b118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liz Crawford
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document