“We Don’t Have the Key to the Executive Washroom”

2012 ◽  
pp. 1217-1240
Author(s):  
Jessica Guth ◽  
Fran Wright

This chapter reports on a pilot study looking at the progression of academic women at one UK University. The chapter focuses on the promotions process and criteria as one important issue emerging from that research. Earlier research has shown that women are less likely to break into institutional networks which allow them to access information not only on formal and objective promotion criteria but also on hidden criteria and the way the ‘academic game’ is played. One result of this is that some academic women may have an inaccurate view of promotion criteria and processes. At the university studied by the authors, the Human Resources department has sought to make the promotion process more transparent and, officially at least, it no longer depends purely upon research achievements. However, these changes will not necessarily result in easier progression for women academics. The authors’ study confirms that there is still a mismatch between what women think the criteria for promotion are, what the formal criteria are and how those criteria actually operate. Reliance on incomplete or inaccurate information about promotion criteria, coupled other factors, such as women’s reluctance to promote themselves actively and traditional barriers to promotion such as caring responsibilities, puts women at a disadvantage when they attempt to progress into more senior positions within universities. Reform of promotions procedures needs to look beyond re-writing the substantive criteria for promotion and look to improving understanding of what is involved.

Author(s):  
Jessica Guth ◽  
Fran Wright

This chapter reports on a pilot study looking at the progression of academic women at one UK University. The chapter focuses on the promotions process and criteria as one important issue emerging from that research. Earlier research has shown that women are less likely to break into institutional networks which allow them to access information not only on formal and objective promotion criteria but also on hidden criteria and the way the ‘academic game’ is played. One result of this is that some academic women may have an inaccurate view of promotion criteria and processes. At the university studied by the authors, the Human Resources department has sought to make the promotion process more transparent and, officially at least, it no longer depends purely upon research achievements. However, these changes will not necessarily result in easier progression for women academics. The authors’ study confirms that there is still a mismatch between what women think the criteria for promotion are, what the formal criteria are and how those criteria actually operate. Reliance on incomplete or inaccurate information about promotion criteria, coupled other factors, such as women’s reluctance to promote themselves actively and traditional barriers to promotion such as caring responsibilities, puts women at a disadvantage when they attempt to progress into more senior positions within universities. Reform of promotions procedures needs to look beyond re-writing the substantive criteria for promotion and look to improving understanding of what is involved.


Author(s):  
Елена Митрофанова ◽  
Elena Mitrofanova ◽  
Г. Дудкина ◽  
G. Dudkina ◽  
А. Дудкин ◽  
...  

Human resources are the main competitive advantage of the company in a market economy. The variety of forms of institutions and organizations becomes a factor of structuring and development of the regional economy. Special attention of scientists and practitioners in the fields of not only Economics, but also politics, law, sociology, psychology attracts collaboration as a poorly studied, but rapidly developing and effective form of relations between economic entities in order to increase competitiveness. The purpose of the article: to determine the features of collaborative interaction of the University in the management of human resources in the regional labor market. On the basis of the analysis of works of domestic and foreign scientists the essence and content of collaboration as process of joint labor, production or economic activity of two and more economic subjects for achievement of the General purposes is defined. It is revealed that the collaborative interaction is based on the principles of consent and trust, i.e. there is a mutually beneficial exchange of knowledge, training of participants to improve their competencies, the production of innovative products with a significant intellectual component to promote to the market and achieve effects in the development of competitiveness of the regional economy. In the course of the pilot study, the cycle and a number of features of the formation of students ‘ competitiveness as a human resource of the regional market are highlighted. In this article, the collaboration is considered from the position of technology to increase the competitiveness of human resources. As a result, the features and effects of collaboration between the University and representatives of the regional market of Krasnoyarsk region are highlighted. The author’s position in the definition of collaboration for companies and the University from the position of the strategy of coordination of interests in the regional labor market is based on the results of a pilot study and has practical significance in the development of the efficiency of human resources management in the region.


1970 ◽  
Vol 2 (S2) ◽  
pp. 107-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathleen M. Kenyon

I do not believe that I am the right person to give this Galton Lecture. I am not in the least a dyed-in-the-wool woman academic. To be that one has to have been man-and-boy in the job. Most of my colleagues at Oxford and sister colleagues at Cambridge could have given the lecture much better. Having written this introductory sentence, it was borne in on me that there were two separate breeds (I am not quite sure whether in this scientific milieu I should say species or genera) of academic women. At Oxford and Cambridge, at Durham, and up to recently in London, there has been the phenomenon (I cannot, in fact, think of any other classificatory term, for obviously one cannot use either breed or species or genera in the generally accepted sense about a single-sex organization) of associations of undiluted women academics, associations to be diluted by about 1972. In other universities, the female of the species is absorbed in the whole. Again, having reached this stage in my meditations, my sense of inadequacy in my present situation is slightly mitigated by the fact that I have at least had some experience of a community in which sex-differentiation was nominally not observed. Between my period as an Oxford undergraduate and my past 7 years as Principal of an Oxford women's college, I had 27 years at the University of London, though I must admit it was at an eccentric and utterly atypical institution.


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bridget Grogan

This article reports on and discusses the experience of a contrapuntal approach to teaching poetry, explored during 2016 and 2017 in a series of introductory poetry lectures in the English 1 course at the University of Johannesburg. Drawing together two poems—Warsan Shire’s “Home” and W.H. Auden’s “Refugee Blues”—in a week of teaching in each year provided an opportunity for a comparison that encouraged students’ observations on poetic voice, racial identity, transhistorical and transcultural human experience, trauma and empathy. It also provided an opportunity to reflect on teaching practice within the context of decoloniality and to acknowledge the need for ongoing change and review in relation to it. In describing the contrapuntal teaching and study of these poems, and the different methods employed in the respective years of teaching them, I tentatively suggest that canonical Western and contemporary postcolonial poems may reflect on each other in unique and transformative ways. I further posit that poets and poems that engage students may open the way into initially “less relevant” yet ultimately rewarding poems, while remaining important objects of study in themselves.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-26
Author(s):  
S.V. Tsymbal ◽  

The digital revolution has transformed the way people access information, communicate and learn. It is teachers' responsibility to set up environments and opportunities for deep learning experiences that can uncover and boost learners’ capacities. Twentyfirst century competences can be seen as necessary to navigate contemporary and future life, shaped by technology that changes workplaces and lifestyles. This study explores the concept of digital competence and provide insight into the European Framework for the Digital Competence of Educators.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 369-383
Author(s):  
Rachel Clements ◽  
Sarah Frankcom

Sarah Frankcom worked at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester between 2000 and 2019, and was the venue’s first sole Artistic Director from 2014. In this interview conducted in summer 2019, she discusses her time at the theatre and what she has learned from leading a major cultural organization and working with it. She reflects on a number of her own productions at this institution, including Hamlet, The Skriker, Our Town, and Death of a Salesman, and discusses the way the theatre world has changed since the beginning of her career as she looks forward to being the director of LAMDA. Rachel Clements lectures on theatre at the University of Manchester. She has published on playwrights Caryl Churchill and Martin Crimp, among others, and has edited Methuen student editions of Lucy Prebble’s Enron and Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange. She is Book Reviews editor of NTQ.


Author(s):  
John D. Evans ◽  
Christopher Bang

The authors introduce the EFAB™ manufacturing process originally invented at the University of Southern California and currently being commercialized by MEMGen Corporation. They discuss its significant recent evolution as an alternative to conventional microdevice manufacturing technologies, suggest a range of geometries and applications that are enabled by this process, and develop the case that EFAB represents a fundamental shift in the way the microdevices are manufactured.


1932 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 355-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Leonard Woolley

The tenth season of the Joint Expedition of the British Museum and of the Museum of the University of Pennsylvania began work in the field on 25 November 1931, and closed down on 19 March 1932. In addition to my wife, my staff included Mr. J. C. Rose, who came out as architect for his second season, and Mr. R. P. Ross-Williamson, who acted as general archaeological assistant; Mr. F. L. W. Richardson of Boston, Massachusetts, was also attached to the Expedition to make a contoured survey of the site (pl. LVIII). NO epigraphist was engaged, for the work contemplated was not expected to produce much in the way of inscriptions; but an arrangement was made whereby Dr. Cyrus B.Gordon, epigraphist on the Tell Billah Expedition of the Museum of the University of Pennsylvania, could be called upon to give his services when required; actually a single visit enabled him to do all that was essential. To each of these I am very much indebted. As usual, Hamoudi was head foreman, with his sons Yahia, Ibrahim and Alawi acting under him, and as usual was invaluable; Yahia also was responsible for all the photographic work of the season. The average number of men employed was 180. This relatively small number of workmen, and the shortness of the season, were dictated partly by reasons of finance but more by the nature of our programme, which envisaged not any new departure in excavation but the clearing up of various points still in doubt and the further probing of sites already excavated, with a view to the final publication of the results of former seasons; the work was therefore rather scattered, five different areas being investigated in turn.


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