5,145 results on '"*OCCUPATIONAL mobility"'
Search Results
2. The Influence of the School Principal's Leadership on the Success Process in Elementary School
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Pierre Senjaya, Niko Sudibjo, Agustian Budi Prasetya, and Rizaldi Parani
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One of the key pillars of a country's advancement is its educational system; a country is only as advanced as the quality of its education system. The viability of the educational system and the relationships among its constituent parts heavily rely on the work of the school principal. The process of replacing the principal, also known as the succession of the principal, produced the current principal who now oversees the school. This study employs a qualitative case study methodology and focuses on the issue of unprepared succession plans in schools when principals change. This research was conducted in four schools in Banten and West Java, comprising two public schools and two private schools. Interviews were carried out with the School Principal, Foundation/Education Supervisor, and Vice Principal. The interview transcripts were analyzed through the identification and coding of data using Atlas.ti software. Data interviews with school administrators on their leadership in carrying out the leadership succession process in schools employed qualitative methodologies. In order to prepare for succession planning that may be applied to schools that have not yet adopted a planned succession process, this research was created to assess the implementation of succession planning for school principals. The evaluation's findings show that the succession of school principals in elementary schools has not been implemented and has not been planned, so it is crucial that this succession be planned for and implemented consistently to guarantee the development, success, and sustainability of a school. According to study findings, unexpected succession may result in school principal vacancies. According to some academics, a decline in the desirability of candidates for jobs as school administrators is the cause of the current shortage of principals.
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- 2024
3. International Academics in National Research Institutes in Korea and Japan: Contributions, Reasons for Migration, and Challenges
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Yangson Kim, Inyoung Song, and Noboru Miyoshi
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This study aims to explore and compare the experiences of international academics in government-funded research institutes in Korea and Japan and focuses on their integration through primary roles and contributions, reasons to stay, and the challenges they face in their academic and daily lives. Although international academics are critical human resources in academia, their experiences in northeast Asian research institutes, instead of universities, require thorough investigation. Additionally, policy initiatives and projects in these countries tend to emphasize international academics in universities instead of those in research institutes. The study conducted semi-structured interviews between October 2020 and July 2021 with 15 international academics from government-funded research institutes in Korea and Japan. We intend to illuminate their experiences outside of universities and demonstrate that a clear academic role, a (relatively) horizontal organizational culture, and systemic support are the major reasons for their decision to stay and integrate. We also highlight the challenges they face in relation to policy, language, and family issues. International academics help create an internationalized work environment, although they frequently struggle to bridge domestic and international academia. All interviewees were male academics working in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields; thus, further studies are required to explore the experiences of female international academics and those working in other areas and to compare between the academic cultures of universities and research institutes in Korea and Japan.
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- 2024
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4. Language Varieties and Labor Mobilities: Englishes in Transnational Work
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Ariane Macalinga Borlongan and Ron Bridget Vilog
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While language is clearly an important aspect of (labor) migration, there have not been many contemplations and interrogations, although truly compelling and necessary, on language varieties and their place and position in labor migration and transnational work in the contemporary world, and hence why we intend to do so in this article. In our paradigmatic analysis of language varieties in the context of labor mobilities, we shall take the case of the varieties of English arising from the global spread of the language worldwide as our focal point. The world Englishes paradigm thus greatly informs and substantiates our discussion so we shall first give the principles of this paradigm shift in linguistics begun by Braj Kachru. We subsequently connect world Englishes theorizing to labor migration practices. We shall argue that language is not only integral to the work being done by migrants, but is actually the work in itself. A consequence of this is that there are language varieties and Englishes which fit the work to be done more than others, and, therefore, these varieties and Englishes are becoming commodified as well in labor migration. We shall also take a look at the structural ramifications of labor migration on Englishes, how these new varieties are restructured further as they move from one place to another along with labor migrants. As it will become apparent, our discussion covers the situation of labor migrants in precarity more than the hyper-mobile elites often privileged in migratory contexts. Ultimately, we shall synthesize issues relating to language varieties in the context of transnational work and propose strategies in dealing not only with multilingual but also language-varietal diversity in (labor) migrations and mobilities.
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- 2024
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5. Game of Brains: Examining Researcher Brain Gain and Brain Drain and Research University Policy
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Yuan Chih Fu, Juan José Moradel Vásquez, Bea Treena Macasaet, Angela Yung Chi Hou, and Justin J. W. Powell
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To explore scientific mobility patterns, we leverage a rich bibliometric dataset on Taiwanese academia. We investigate the movement and productivity of 21,051 highly active researchers who published while affiliated with Taiwanese higher education institutions based on 30 years' worth of publication and affiliation records from 1991 to 2020. The analysis shows evidence of brain drain in Taiwan since the 2010s, with the U.S. the top destination for researchers moving from Taiwan (as well as the largest source of inbound researchers). China comes a close second to the U.S. as the top destination for outbound scholars. Studying how Taiwan's universities recruited talent after the country adopted the 2005 excellence initiative, we discover that the numbers of scholars recruited by World Class Universities (WCUs) and non-WCUs surprisingly converge with WCUs exhibiting a dramatic decrease in new recruits. Our evidence uncovers that inbound scholars, after their move, are more productive than non-mobile colleagues; however, this effect declines over time. We discuss implications for the study of excellence initiatives, their (un)intended consequences, and mechanisms of talent circulation that greatly impact research production and research university development.
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- 2024
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6. Well-Being and the Internationalisation of Academic Life: An Exploration from the Periphery
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Viviana Ramírez and Leandro Rodriguez-Medina
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While internationalising scholarly careers is an imperative in current academia, literature has focused on the impact of such a process at the institutional, national, and international levels. Yet, internationalisation is connected to the personal dimension of careers and, consequently, it might defy academics' understanding of their working life. The intertwined between well-being and internationalisation in academia is understudied. Using data from qualitative interviews with social science scholars in Mexico, we argue that, seen from the periphery, internationalisation affects personal well-being and job satisfaction both positively and negatively. The challenges of internationalisation for work-life balance depend on the ability of academics to capitalise on their international experiences and their costs. Results indicate that there is no homogeneous positive position with respect to this imperative of academic life today. Hence, if higher education institutions are committed to pursue strategies for internationalisation, they must recognise the personal costs and benefits of this process.
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- 2024
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7. Chinese Students' Resilience in Making Post-Graduation Plans under the US-China Geopolitical Tensions
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Li, Xiaojie
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As the US-China geopolitical tensions escalated, this study sought to investigate how Chinese students respond to the political circumstances when making their post-graduation plans. Drawing from interviews among 15 Chinese international students who graduated from a US university, this study found that most Chinese students did not change their post-graduation plans due to the heightened tensions between the US and China; however, they enacted agency to overcome the difficulties imposed by the geopolitical context. This study challenged the deficit view of international student research by indicating that Chinese students could adapt to a set of perspectives, transform these perspectives into actions, and leverage useful resources to protect their career and life aspirations. The study also warned the danger of the continuity of the anti-China political rhetoric and emphasized the role of higher education institutions in buffering the negative political impact and supporting Chinese and all international students.
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- 2023
8. Vocational Music Education Institutions and Music Teacher Training in Turkey in the 21st Century
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Ilhan Özgul
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In this study, the process of training music teachers working in primary, middle, and high schools affiliated with the Ministry of National Education in Turkey is examined. Within this scope, Higher Education Programs related to Music Education, Pedagogical Formation Education Certificate Program (PFECP) and Student Profile/Quality of Music Education Institutions were investigated to answer three fundamental questions. According to the findings obtained, it has been determined that there is a structure of music education in 16 different faculties with various names, apart from the Music Education program in the Faculty of Education, and students studying in these institutions have the right to be appointed as music teachers by completing the (PFECP). Furthermore, it was determined that the scores of the TYT (Basic Skills Test) determined for admission to 16 different faculties outside the Faculty of Education were very low/insufficient. The education process of the Pedagogical Formation Education Certificate Program does not meet the expected "competencies of the music teaching profession" in training music teachers. In our country, which has a tradition, experience, and accumulation of training music teachers for 100 years, there is a need to re-think and re-imagine the structure and policies of music teacher training in the 21st century. The Ministry of National Education (MONE), the Council of Higher Education (COHE), universities, academicians, civil society organizations, and all stakeholders in music education should take steps to correct the deficiencies, inconsistencies, and contradictions in teacher/music teacher training practices.
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- 2023
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9. The Need to Practice What We Teach: Sticky Floor Effect in 11 States' Universities
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Jamye Long, Cooper Johnson, and Sam Faught
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Universities, specifically their colleges of business, stress within courses, through events, and across their public persona the significance of gender diversity practices as a means to treat women fairly, provide them with equal opportunities, and to create an even playing field. The emphasis of this topic stresses that gender diversity is of great importance to universities' leaderships. However, this study seeks to explore if the practices within universities match their outward appearances. Within this study the public universities from 11 southern U.S. states during the academic year (AY) 2022-2023 administrative positions from their colleges of business to their upper administrative officers are analyzed regarding their gender compositions of those holding these positions and how their employment practices reflect their true gender diversity, equal opportunity, and fair employment practices. Of particular interest is the sticky floor effect, in which administrative opportunities given to women are explored.
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- 2023
10. Scrutinising Moves Used in Job Recruitment Posters for English for Specific Purposes Classrooms: A Case Study of Hotel Job Recruitment
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Krittaya Phattisiri, Kirana Laongchinda, Nuttamon Prakot, and Piyapong Laosrirattanachai
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This study investigated the move structure utilised in hotel recruitment posters. To achieve this, a collection of hotel recruitment posters was obtained from groups on Facebook seeking hotel jobs, as this social media service boasts the highest number of members. Three groups were selected for data collection. In total, 525 hotel recruitment posters were collected. Only the English posters were analysed to determine the move structures employed in hotel recruitment posters. The study incorporated inter-coder reliability procedures to ensure the accuracy of the findings. The inter-coder reliability rate was 90.28%, indicating a high level of agreement between the coders. The analysis revealed that hotel recruitment posters comprised 19 distinct moves and 19 individual steps. The move analysis revealed the presence of five mandatory moves, namely Hotel identity (99.43%), Job position (98.29%), Contacts (86.48%), Poster purpose (76.95%), and How to apply (70.48%), along with four mandatory steps, consisting of Hotel name (99.43%), Hotel logo (79.43%), Phone number (74.86%), and Apply by email (65.71%). The findings of this study have implications for both teachers and students, as they can incorporate these results as a chapter in English for Specific Purposes courses, thus enhancing their understanding and application of the topic.
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- 2023
11. Perceptions of Occupational Therapy Practitioners as Leaders within the New York State Education System
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Jaime Spencer, Serena Zeidler, and Kim Wiggins
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In most states, occupational therapy practitioners are restricted from advancing to formal school leadership positions. The absence of pathways to leadership may limit the ability to fulfill AOTA's Vision 2025 and Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). This study investigates how limited opportunities for career advancement affect school practice trends. We explore the perceptions of school practitioners in New York State concerning leadership, advocacy, and state policies. Seven hundred and fourteen current and former occupational therapy practitioners in New York schools completed a researcher-developed online survey. Notably, almost all respondents (94.7%) agreed that practitioners should be able to pursue educational administrative coursework. Most (94.6%) agreed that practitioners in New York should advocate for policies that would allow them to pursue such coursework. Many respondents reported that they would consider pursuing the coursework if available. This research emphasizes the misalignment between federal and state policies. Federal policy (ESSA) and Vision 2025 encourage greater involvement for occupational therapy practitioners, but state policy restricts their advancement. The findings demonstrate the pressing need for reform and the creation of pathways that enable occupational therapy practitioners to assume formal leadership positions in school settings, thus enhancing their contribution to the school community.
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- 2024
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12. Career Consolidation or Reformulation? A Careership Theory Approach to Football Coaches' Transnational Migration and Career Development
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Ce Guo, Richard Giulianotti, and Minhyeok Tak
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This article examines the career development of international football coaches in the context of their transnational migration. Previous research has mainly relied on the normative stages models to explain coaching career development, which has limitations in capturing the complexity and diversity of coach career trajectories, particularly in terms of unique individual experiences and contextual impacts on their career development. Drawing upon the theory of careership, this article seeks to bridge the gap by focusing on how individual coaches navigate their careers according to their horizon for action. Careership theory provides a useful lens through which to examine the interactions between individuals and their contexts, in gaining a more nuanced understanding of how these interactions shape career trajectories. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with eight international coaches who worked in China to gather qualitative data. The results show that the migration of coaches closely intertwined with their career development in a variety of ways, which were manifested in different career horizons for migration within two distinct stages of career development: (1) 'career-consolidation' reflecting the willingness to stabilise and solidify the career pathways, and (2) 'career-reformulation' highlighting the desires or needs to change the current career trajectories. The findings of this article suggest that career development is a multifaceted process encompassing normative, longitudinal steps, individualised approaches, objectives, constraints and unexpected events. Analysing coaches' horizons for action allows researchers and practitioners (e.g. coach educators) to gain a holistic picture of individual and contextual distinctions within the longitudinal stages of coaching career development.
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- 2024
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13. Employability and Training: Public Attitudes, the Labour Market and Vocational Training Policies
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Shlomo Mizrahi and Dana Natan Krup
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One of the main challenges in modern labour markets is to improve the mobility and employability of workers among workplaces, jobs and roles. This paper explores the factors that might influence people's beliefs about and attitudes towards the mechanisms for improving employability through training. We develop a research model and test it in Israel using surveys that were distributed at two points in time - before and during an acute crisis in the labour market - the Covid-19 pandemic. Perceptions about personal mobility and employability and prior educational experience play a major role in explaining citizens' attitudes towards training. Beliefs about the effectiveness of government training providers as well as employment security are relatively marginal in explaining the demand for training. Policy implications follow.
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- 2024
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14. Exit and Voice: A Case Study of the Effect of the Policy of Rotating Teachers and Principals on the Decision of Parents to Engage in School Choice
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Xiaoxin Wu
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Since it emerged in the mid-1980s, the school choice phenomenon in China has been the target of severe criticism from all levels of government and the general public. The current nationwide movement of rotating teachers and principals (RTP) is a new attempt to control and eventually eliminate the practice of school choice. Using data from interviews with two education officials and 42 parents, together with relevant government documents, this study applies Hirschman's concept of exit and voice to explore how parents express their dissatisfaction (voice) and exercise (or not) their choice behaviour (exit) in reaction to the government's strategic use of RTP. Findings from this study suggest that RTP and related efforts have had an impact on reshaping parents' perception of the schools and has greatly reduced the parents' school choice behaviour, which is more obvious among second- and third-tier schools than among first-tier schools, indicating that parental desire to send their children to these topmost schools remains strong. Some level of school choice can be expected to exist for the foreseeable future, given China's current exam-driven educational system and the advantages that first-tier schools enjoy, which will maintain and possibly widen the gap between themselves and lower ranked schools.
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- 2024
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15. Women's Leadership Development Is Everybody's Business: If Not Now, When?
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Barbara Watterston and Lisa C. Ehrich
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The focus of this paper lies in our special interest in women leaders and those aspiring to leadership positions in schools and other educational contexts within Australia. Leadership is a gendered concept, and due to a myriad of factors including conscious and unconscious bias, and the challenges of balancing career with other life commitment, the reality is that women's career journeys are different from men's. Women's unique career trajectories have implications for achieving their leadership potential. In addition to reviewing some of the extant literature in the area of women in educational leadership, we share our experiences and reflections based on our research and the leadership development programmes we have run for women mainly in Australia. These programmes have reinforced to us their value, place, and contribution to enhancing women's capacities for leadership. In this paper, we address the following four key questions as they pertain to women leaders within the Australian context: (1) Why a focus on gender and leadership? (2) What are some of the barriers impeding women leaders? (3) Why is it important to have multiple faces of leadership? (4) Why is women's leadership development everyone's responsibility?
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- 2024
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16. How Does Millennial Employee Job Satisfaction Affect Performance?
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Indrayani Indrayani, Nurhatisyah Nurhatisyah, Damsar Damsar, and Chablullah Wibisono
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Purpose: This study aims to test and analyze the effect of continuous commitment, task complexity, competence and personal value on employee performance millennial intervening job satisfaction. Design/methodology/approach: This research method is quantitative with a sequential explanatory design, then data collection through a questionnaire, with a sample of 205 respondents - data analysis using Structural Equation Model (SEM) with the software Linear Structural Relationship (LISREL). Findings: The results of research on the performance of millennial employees with intervening work satisfaction showed that continuous commitment (2.49), task complexity (2.74) and professional competence (2.0) had a significant effect. This means that the performance of millennial employees will increase if they get job satisfaction. With satisfaction, the commitment and competence of millennial employees are high. While the research results for the performance of millennial employees have a direct influence, only professional competence (2.27) and task complexity (4.06) are significant. This means that as high as professional competence is characterized by intellectual, emotional mood and attitude, owned by millennial employees, the resulting performance is increased even with complex tasks. Research limitations/implications: The findings of this study have significance for enhancing organizational performance so that businesses can maximize the performance of millennial employees by paying attention to job satisfaction, professional competence and personal values. Originality/value: This research's contribution to millennial workers is to help them improve and develop their performance, allowing them to compete more effectively. The findings of this study have significance for enhancing organizational performance so that businesses can maximize the performance of millennial employees by paying attention to job satisfaction, professional competence and personal values.
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- 2024
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17. Happier on the Outside? Discourses of Exclusion, Disempowerment and Belonging from Former Autistic School Staff
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Rebecca Wood
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Autistic individuals can have poor outcomes from school, including high rates of unemployment. Despite a growing focus on the work experiences of autistic people, and various approaches to remediate the difficulties they undergo, the school sector remains largely unexplored, as are the insights available from former autistic employees. In a discourse analysis of 12 former autistic school staff previously in a range of roles in the UK, the multiple and intersecting issues they experienced are analysed. These reveal different forms of marginalisation, disempowerment, invisibility and exclusion at play, including in relation to being autistic, before the final departure. However, participant discourses also demonstrate important autistic aptitudes of particular benefit to pupils at risk of marginalisation themselves, and provide insights into how autistic staff--including visiting professionals--can be better supported in the school sector in the future. Such steps could provide significant benefits for the education field generally, especially in relation to the inclusion of autistic and otherwise neurodivergent pupils.
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- 2024
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18. The Same Starting Line? The Effect of a Master's Degree on PhD Students' Career Trajectories
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Huan Li, Jisun Jung, and Hugo Horta
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Research on the career trajectories of doctoral recipients often assumes that all PhD students begin in roughly the same starting position. Consequently, the impact of pre-programme experiences remains understudied. This qualitative study draws on 59 interviews with PhD students studying in mainland China and Hong Kong to explore the influence of learning experiences during the master's degree programme on planned PhD career trajectories. Using identity-trajectory theory, we find that students with a master's degree had greater research expertise, a more prominent research profile, more established academic networks, and greater familiarity with the requirements of the academic profession and academic job market. This enabled them to adapt to institutional expectations and have a better-informed motivation for pursuing a PhD to become an academic. Based on these findings, we argue that having a master's degree gives PhD students a competitive advantage over peers without master's degrees. Our findings have implications for the importance of research training in master's education and the relevance of master's programmes for PhD admission policies.
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- 2024
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19. The Intersection of Industry and Academia: Assessing the Perceptions and Experiences of Industry Professionals Who Transition to Academic Roles in Higher Education in the United States
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Jay S. Pickern and Helena R. Costakis
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Limited scholarly work has been conducted on the perceptions and experiences of industry professionals transitioning to full-time academic positions in US higher education institutions. Ten semi-structured interviews were conducted with former industry practitioners who transitioned to full-time academic roles to explore their motivations and challenges associated with the transition from industry to academia, as well as their desires to remain in higher education or return to the industry. Despite career-related challenges, participants valued collegial relationships and the direct impact on students, fostering a strong desire to remain in academia. They highlighted the need for improved leadership pertaining to preparation for academic careers, fair compensation, and enhanced training and mentoring support for working with students. This study provides valuable insights into the experiences of industry professionals in academia, emphasising the importance of comprehensive support and understanding in US higher education institutions.
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- 2024
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20. Parental Experience and Distress: The Protective Role of Self-Care and Employment Flexibility on Parenting Practices in Parents of Adolescents
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Meltem Kubat, Louise McLean, Fiona May, Gina-Maree Sartore, Jan Matthews, Mandy Kienhuis, and Catherine Wade
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Objective: The aim of this study was to identify whether the coping strategy of active self-care, and the coping resource of employment flexibility were moderators of the relationships between parental distress and parenting practices, and parental experience and parenting practices, in parents of adolescents. Method: This research was part of a larger study conducted by the Parenting Research Centre who surveyed a representative sample of 2600 Victorian parents on their parental concerns, approaches, and experiences using computer-assisted telephone interviews. Results: Results demonstrated that employment flexibility and active self-care significantly moderated the relationship between a demanding parental experience and autonomy-supportive parent-child communication, and that active self-care moderated the relationship between the belief parenting comes naturally and negative parenting. It was concluded that both coping indicators had protective effects on parenting practices, through interacting with parental experience. Conclusions: Practical implications of this research include enhancement of parental interventions by lending evidence that both self-care and employment flexibility promote parent-child communication and protect against more aversive parenting behaviours.
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- 2024
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21. 'Amid the Wildflowers': Jane Frazee - Her Life, Career, and Contributions to Music Education in the United States
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Erica Kupinski
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Jane Frazee, an American music educator, administrator, and author has contributed to music education in the United States. This article surveys the impact of her efforts from 1960 to 2015. A pioneer member and past president of the American Orff-Schulwerk Association (AOSA), she taught music to children and adults using the Orff approach and has presented at workshops, clinics, and conferences throughout the United States, as well as internationally. She authored several books and Orff arrangement collections, and her articles have been published in prestigious professional journals and other publications. This paper addresses Frazee's early life, training, influential individuals, teaching of children and adults, and her work with AOSA. Her roles in the founding and administration of Orff certification and graduate programs in music education in Minnesota are discussed. Lastly, Frazee's role as an author and the influences of her publications on music educators in the United States were also examined. Although retired from teaching and administration, Frazee continues to publish and inspires current and future generations of music educators.
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- 2024
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22. (Dis)continuities in Academic Middle Management Career Trajectories: A Longitudinal Qualitative Study
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K. Machovcova, G. Kováts, J. Mudrák, K. Cidlinská, and K. Zábrodská
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Department heads are central in the university setting as an important buffer between university leadership and academic staff. However, taking on a middle management role can lead to significant disruptions in academic careers. To investigate the career trajectories of 31 academics in middle management roles, two waves of semi-structured interviews were conducted in 2015-16 (N = 31) and 2021 (N = 26). By exploring (dis)continuity in academic careers and (dis)engagement with participants' managerial roles, we identified four types of trajectories that appeared to influence participants' possibilities of future academic career development. We labelled these trajectories as follows: temporary managers, early managers, duty-served senior managers, and acclaimed managers. We argue that temporary managers, who are appointed to a fixed-term managerial position early in their academic careers, face the highest risk of disruptions in their academic career development, while duty-served senior managers, who are appointed to a fixed-term managerial position later in their careers, represent the most sustainable group.
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- 2024
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23. Using Email Interviews to Reflect on Women's Careers at a Regional University
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Anitra Goriss-Hunter and Kate White
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The article investigates asynchronous narrative research via email as a flexible and agentic method of collecting data that may empower female participants. A case study was used that focused on the challenges for academic and professional women at an Australian regional university. Twenty-one women responded by email to a range of questions about working conditions and career progression. The data demonstrated that participants found this methodology empowering, encouraging agentic behaviour as they could respond at a time that suited them and in as much detail as they desired. They could also leave their narratives and return to them after some reflection. While lacking the non-verbal markers that often add to meanings in face-to-face interviews, the participants' writing gave voice and form to their lived experience that has been missing from academic literature. This research method may be vital in the continuing COVID-19 environment where it can be difficult to access geographically dispersed participants.
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- 2024
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24. Compensation or Reproduction? The Implications of Online Learning for Socio-Economic Equalisation in Urban China
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Chong Zhang
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This study explores the implications of promoting online learning for equalisation, focusing on urban China where online learning is promoted to alleviate socio-economic gaps between rural migrants and urban residents. To achieve equalisation, online learning should benefit disadvantaged individuals as least as much as, if not more than, the advantaged counterparts, as greater returns for the advantaged can reproduce pre-existing inequalities. This study examines the interaction effect between "hukou" (household registration) origin and daily online learning on occupational mobility and income growth, using data from the China Family Panel Studies. Findings reveal modest economic returns to online learning. While not found to benefit urban residents more, the most ideal scenario for equalisation, greater online learning benefits for rural migrants, is limited, except for the increased downward occupational mobility avoidance effect for rural origin women. These results underscore the deficiency of solely relying on online learning to challenge inequalities.
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- 2024
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25. Effects of a District-Managed Restart Strategy for Low-Performing Schools in Texas. REL 2022-137. Appendixes
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Regional Educational Laboratory Southwest (ED/IES), National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE) (ED/IES), and American Institutes for Research (AIR)
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The Texas Education Agency offers grants for districts to implement school turnaround strategies at low-performing schools. Districts that receive these grants can implement a school turnaround strategy (referred to as a district-managed restart strategy) that includes replacing principals and teachers at schools that the district identifies as struggling and needing additional support. The "Effects of a District-Managed Restart Strategy for Low-Performing Schools in Texas" study examined implementation of the restart strategy and its effects on teacher and principal mobility, student achievement, and student attendance. This document presents the following four appendixes that accompany the study: (1) Data and methods; (2) Supporting analyses; (3) Supplemental analyses; and (4) Interview sample and protocol. [For the full report, see ED621559. For the Study Snapshot, see ED621561.]
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- 2022
26. Effects of a District-Managed Restart Strategy for Low-Performing Schools in Texas. REL 2022-137
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Regional Educational Laboratory Southwest (ED/IES), National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE) (ED/IES), American Institutes for Research (AIR), Herrera, Angelica, Garland, Marshall, Osman, David, and Feygin, Amy
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The Texas Education Agency offers grants for districts to implement school turnaround strategies at low-performing schools. Districts that receive these grants can implement a school turnaround strategy (referred to as a district-managed restart strategy) that includes replacing most of the principals and teachers at schools that the district identifies as struggling and needing additional support. From 2015/16 to 2018/19, 29 schools across four urban and suburban districts in Texas implemented a district-managed restart strategy in three cohorts: one district began in 2015/16, another in 2017/18, and two in 2018/19. This study used longitudinal administrative data and interviews with district and school leaders to examine implementation of the restart strategy and its effects on teacher and principal mobility, student achievement, and student attendance. Nearly 80 percent of the teachers at schools in the year before implementation of the restart strategy left before the beginning of the restart school year. Educators who arrived at restart schools were more likely to have more than three years of experience and to have an advanced degree than those who left or stayed. The restart strategy had a positive effect on student achievement in reading and math and on student attendance, but the effect on attendance was not sustained beyond the first year of implementation. Nearly all restart schools met accountability standards within the first three years of implementation. Finally, interviews with district and school leaders suggested that recruiting high-performing teachers to relocate to restart schools was time consuming and that the grant-funded salary stipend might not have been a large enough incentive for high-performing teachers to relocate. State leaders can use the results of this study to make decisions about continuing to offer grants for districts to implement the district-managed restart strategy in their low performing schools. [For the Study Snapshot, see ED621561. For the Appendixes, see ED621560.]
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- 2022
27. The Effect of the Uniform Bar Examination on Admissions, Diversity, Affordability, and Employment across Law Schools in the United States
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Odle, Taylor K., Bae, Ji Yeon, and González Canché, Manuel S.
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The Uniform Bar Examination (UBE) is a multijurisdictional test that law students can use to gain admission to the bar in 37 states and territories. Despite this near-universal applicability and the potential of UBE to affect law schools' admissions, diversity, affordability, and employment outcomes, no research to date has examined the impacts of UBE. Equipped with a novel data set that we make available to future researchers, we apply a difference-in-differences design to estimate these impacts by exploiting variation in UBE adoption timing across states. We find early evidence to suggest that law schools in UBE states benefited by receiving more applications and having higher overall enrollments after UBE adoption. [For the corresponding grantee submission, see ED627119.]
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- 2023
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28. Counseling Based on Local Wisdom for Conflict Settlement in the Workplace: A Case Study in Kendari
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Shaleh, Muh, Awad, Faizah Binti, and Rezki, Anita
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Conflicts can manifest in nearly any environment, including the workplace, and they arise from people's interactions with each other, which can be both constructive and destructive. There are many ways to settle these issues, but one way is to include local residents in counselling. This study, therefore, reflects on the degree to which a counselor's actions and measures for settling conflicts using local wisdom can benefit both parties. This research focuses on how disputes arise in the workplace and how counseling based on local wisdom can help resolve them. The participants for this study were four employees who had worked for more than two years in the same division, namely administrative services, but came from different tribes. The results of this study revealed that a counseling approach based on local wisdom could significantly help to resolve disputes that often occurred among the employees in the office, demonstrating that approaches that use local expertise can successfully settle conflicts in the workplace. The implementation of cultural values by counselors--such as "Kohanu" (culture of shame), "Moreu" (politeness), "Medulu" (join), "Mepokoaso" (unite), and "Samaturu" (helping each other)--have positive consequences in terms of making colleagues more respectful and helpful toward each other when conducting work. This in turn had an indirect effect on personal and office efficiency.
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- 2022
29. The Relationship between Principal Attrition and Academic Factors in Georgia's High-Needs Rural Schools
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Pannell, Summer and McBrayer, Juliann Sergi
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The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between principal attrition and academic factors in Georgia's high-needs rural schools. The research shows that principals have a significant impact on student outcomes, and principal attrition is a disruptive factor in schools. The findings from this study indicate a negative correlation between principal turnover and every academic component of Georgia's College and Career Readiness Index (CCRPI) at elementary, middle, and high schools in high-needs rural schools in Georgia. Implications for practice are the need to recruit and retain high-quality principals in Georgia's high-needs rural schools and the development of purposeful, collaborative, and sustainable professional learning to better prepare leaders for the unique challenges these schools face. Recommendations for future research include expanding the research to other rural schools and expanding the timeframe of the study to better understand the relationship between principal attrition and student outcomes.
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- 2022
30. Principal Retention Patterns in Arizona, Nevada, and Utah. Appendixes. REL 2022-129
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Regional Educational Laboratory West (ED/IES), National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE) (ED/IES), and WestEd
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The "Principal Retention Patterns in Arizona, Nevada, and Utah" study examined principal retention rates in Arizona, Nevada, and Utah. The study sought to understand principal retention patterns in these states, so that their new statewide leadership support initiatives could identify areas where support could be most effective. Principal retention patterns varied by state according to grade span, school locale type, and student demographic characteristics. In addition, across the three states, proportionally fewer principals remained at schools with lower average proficiency rates on standardized tests in math and English language arts than at schools with higher average proficiency rates from fall 2016 to fall 2019 (three year retention). This document presents the following three appendixes that accompany the study: (1) Data and methods; (2) Detailed results for principal mobility; and (3) County-level retention rates by state. [For the full report, see ED617164. For the Study Snapshot, see ED617165.]
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- 2021
31. Principal Retention Patterns in Arizona, Nevada, and Utah. REL 2022-129
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Regional Educational Laboratory West (ED/IES), National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE) (ED/IES), WestEd, Makkonen, Reino, and Jaquet, Karina
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The departure of an effective school leader can influence staff turnover and student achievement for several years. With school systems facing an unprecedented public health crisis due to COVID-19, principal retention is a key area of concern for many local and state education agencies. The Regional Educational Laboratory West undertook this study of principal retention rates to help leaders in Arizona, Nevada, and Utah better understand principal retention patterns in their state, so that their new statewide leadership support initiatives could identify areas where support could be most effective. Findings showed that fewer than half of principals in each of these states remained at the same school from fall 2016 to fall 2020 (four year retention). The study also found that principals who changed jobs (but remained in the principalship) tended to move to a new school in the same local education agency rather than to a new school in another local education agency. Principal retention patterns varied by state according to grade span, school locale type, and student demographic characteristics. In addition, across the three states, proportionally fewer principals remained at schools with lower average proficiency rates on standardized tests in math and English language arts than at schools with higher average proficiency rates from fall 2016 to fall 2019 (three year retention). [For the Study Snapshot, see ED617165. For the appendixes, see ED617166.]
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- 2021
32. Unequal Pay for Equal Work? Unpacking the Gender Gap in Principal Compensation
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Grissom, Jason A., Timmer, Jennifer D., Nelson, Jennifer L., and Blissett, Richard S. L.
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We investigate the male-female gap in principal compensation in state and national data: detailed longitudinal personnel records from Missouri and repeated cross-sections from the nationally representative Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS). In both data sets, we estimate substantively important compensation gaps for school leaders. In Missouri, female principals make approximately $1,450 less annually than their male colleagues with similar characteristics, including experience level and degree attainment, leading the same school in different years. Gaps are present in both base salary and extra duty salary, and are only partially explained by career paths or workplace sorting. SASS analyses show that women make about $1,000 less than men nationally, on average, a gap that even grows larger once accounting for individual and workplace characteristics, teacher-supplied effectiveness ratings, and reported hours worked. The presence of these residual gaps after accounting for many supply-side explanations may signal gender discrimination in school principal compensation. [This paper was published in "Economics of Education Review" v82 Apr 2021.]
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- 2021
33. Designing and Delivering Career Pathways at Community Colleges. A Practice Guide for Educators. WWC 2021007
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What Works Clearinghouse (ED), Abt Associates, Inc., Cotner, Hope, Bragg, Debra, Goold, Grant, Heiser, Eric, Miller, Darlene G., Van Noy, Michelle, Cheng, I-Fang, Costelloe, Sarah, Freeman, Brian, Lemire, Sebastian, Porowski, Allan, and Yadav, Elizabeth M. B.
- Abstract
In today's labor market, students increasingly need greater levels of postsecondary education and training to enter or advance in many industries. Meanwhile, employers are calling for the education system to better align with industry needs, as their demands for a skilled workforce continue to rise. In response to the increasing emphasis for postsecondary institutions to prepare students for family-sustaining employment in high-growth, in-demand industries, community colleges are employing a number of strategies to meet the needs of both job seekers and employers. Many of these strategies are found within career and technical education (CTE) programs, and they are also present in broader workforce development activities and supports offered by community colleges. The career pathways approach, as defined under the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) and reinforced under the Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), has become widely used in education and workforce development. Because of the emphasis on career pathways in CTE programs for the past decade and the availability of rigorous evaluation results on this topic, this practice guide is focused on community college-based CTE interventions through the lens of career pathways. This guide draws upon studies of interventions that include one or more of the career pathways components defined under the WIOA. It focuses on promising interventions where there is evidence of improved educational or labor market outcomes. This guide provides community colleges with five specific recommendations for supporting occupational skills training through career pathways.
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- 2021
34. Breaking through the Glass Ceiling, but at What Cost? From Transitions between Hierarchical Levels to the Diversity of Ascending, Lateral, or Descending Career Paths of Women Executives
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Giguère, Émilie, Pelletier, Mariève, Bilodeau, Karine, and St-Arnaud, Louise
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The present article proposes to broaden the understanding of the life courses of women executives to include an experiential perspective of meaning built around their different life projects. Our study is based on a qualitative approach employing narrative research methodology to analyze interviews with a sample of 51 women executives. Our findings reveal key experiences and events and a diversity of transitions between hierarchical levels that characterize their career development. They also show a number of possible configurations of rapprochement, integration, distancing, or separation between the different spheres of life and their influence on executive careers through ascending, lateral, or descending career paths. These findings contribute to a deeper insight into the complex career paths of women executives and underscore the value of including these different dimensions when considering guidance support strategies for this clientele.
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- 2023
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35. International Student Mobility: An Empirical Study Based on FEUP Mechanical Engineering Data
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Castro, Catarina F. and Barbosa, Manuel R.
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Students are formal learners seeking documented and recognized tertiary education. Student mobility in higher education can be inward (into a country) or outward (out of a country). Both types of mobility are educational processes offering different experiences and resulting in different outcomes. At least half of MIEM (Integrated Mechanical Engineering master degree of the Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto, Porto, Portugal) students are driven to seek different institutions and different societies outside their known environment. During the academic year 2019/20 one hundred and forty MIEM students were engaged on exchange mobility projects distributed among inward Portuguese universities and a large number of outward European and non-European programs. This report focuses on MIEM student exchange aiming to share collected data based on numbers and experiences. A developed questionnaire addressing exchange mobility benefits on student educational progression as well as on the foreseen future career was handled to all 2019/20 mobility students and the collected data are reported here. Results of the survey show that 90% of the responding students consider that the engaged exchange program will turn into a positive influence on their career and a short 10% did not appreciate the mobility experience.
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- 2021
36. Teamwork and Regional Universities: The Benefits for Women of a Third Space
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Goriss-Hunter, Anitra and White, Kate
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This article reports on the findings of a study that explored the benefits and challenges for women of working at an Australian regional university in early 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic. It examines whether living and working at a regional university with dispersed campuses presented particular challenges for women and whether it had an impact on their career progression. Twenty-one women supplied written responses to a list of questions provided by the researchers. The main finding was that women enjoyed working in teams and preferred flexibility, autonomy and positive teamwork environments. To address challenges identified in the study about working across dispersed campuses and the limitations of virtual communication, particularly in the current pandemic, the article investigates the feasibility of a blended approach to teamwork using the concept of a third space.
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- 2021
37. Formation of Professional Mobility of Future Specialists in the Process of Choreographic Education
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Azizkhanova, Didar K., Almetov, Negmatzhan Sh, Turdaliyeva, Sholpan Zh, Aitzhanova, Akmaral B., and Musakhanova, Gulmira M.
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One of the main conditions for the success of students of the specialty "choreography" in the modern labor market is professional mobility. This article is therefore aims to address the problem of forming professional mobility in higher educational institutions. The essence and significance of the formation of professional mobility of students of the specialty "choreography" was determined by the methods of analysis of psychological, pedagogical, scientific-methodological and special literature. Through the analysis of educational programs of Bachelor's degree in "choreography" in higher educational institutions, new opportunities and content for the formation of professional mobility of future choreographers are identified. With the help of systematization and evaluation methods, the results of improving the formation of professional mobility of students studying in the educational programs "choreography" were summed up. It was concluded that the formation of professional mobility of future choreographers should be a purposeful and systematic process, covering all stages of students' assimilation of educational programs, and must be guided by the achievement of high indicators of the formation of professional mobility.
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- 2021
38. Fostering Tertiary Student Professional Mobility Skills via Convergence of the Professional Training and Foreign Language Learning
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Bobrytska, Valentyna I., Luzik, Elvira V., Skyrda, Tetiana S., Tereminko, Larysa H., and Hurska, Olena O.
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The purpose of the study was to identify how the instructional model that converges professional training and foreign language learning can influence the students' professional mobility and students' readiness to build their careers. The study used the methods of a quantitative kind for the evaluation study and descriptive research. The variables for the study were as follows: levels of student professional mobility skills proficiency that included students' competence in their professional field, foreign language proficiency, students' networking skills, personality qualities, and sampled students' satisfaction with the reshaped course. The field phase of the study found that the Erasmus and Work-and-Travel programmes contributed to the former students' adaptability and flexibility, the experience of work abroad, and practical specialism-related experience gained during study. The students developed their abilities to project a positive social image, ability to build and maintain relationships, foreign language proficiency, proficiency in presenting and negotiating, and theoretical knowledge. The English Language-delivered Professional Mobility course brought shifts in the levels of students' professional mobility skills. The experimental group students reported that they improved their competence in their professional field, foreign language proficiency, networking skills, and personality qualities. The experimental group students' judgements concerning the quality of the course were complimentary.
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- 2021
39. Better Scores, Better Jobs, an Untested Assumption: Social Mobility and Achievement in Mathematics and Science in the United States
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Huang, Haigen and Paralkar, Vijay Keshaorao
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The purpose of this study was to investigate the mediating effect of student achievement in mathematics and science in individuals' intergenerational social mobility between parental socioeconomic status (SES) and their future occupational prestige. We also examined the mediating effect of other factors, such as parental expectation for educational attainment. The Longitudinal Study of American Youth (LSAY) 1987-1994 and 2007-2011 data (a sample of 5,945 high school students) were analyzed with structural equation modeling. Our results indicated that high school student achievement in mathematics and science significantly mediated students' intergenerational social mobility between parental SES and their future occupational prestige. Also, achievement in mathematics and science had a lesser effect than students' expectations for future education.
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- 2021
40. Student and Skilled Labour Mobility in the Asia Pacific Region: Reflecting the Emerging Fourth Industrial Revolution. International and Development Education
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Ashizawa, Shingo, Neubauer, Deane E., Ashizawa, Shingo, and Neubauer, Deane E.
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This volume explores the implications of student mobility on higher education across the Asia Pacific Region. Student mobility has become a major feature of higher education throughout the world, and most particularly over the past two decades within the Asia Pacific Region. This system of mobility is entering a period of profound predicted change, created by the social and economic transformations being occasioned by the rapid increased uses of artificial intelligence (AI), a process that is being increasingly framed as the "Fourth Industrial Revolution" or Work 4.0, a process that is widely predicted to evoke fundamental changes in the ways that work is performed and who does it. This volume explores various dimensions of this process, examining various aspects of the process as they are affecting national and regional economies even as the phenomenon produces a wide variety of engagements with the global economy as a whole.
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- 2023
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41. COVID-19 Impacts on Early Career Trajectories and Mobility of Doctoral Graduates in Aotearoa New Zealand
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Spronken-Smith, R. A., Brown, K., Cameron, C., McAuliffe, M. J., Riley, T., and Weaver, C. K.
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This article explores how doctoral graduates in Aotearoa New Zealand are being impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. A survey captured the employment and mobility situations of doctoral graduates from 2019 to early 2021 from six of the eight universities in NZ. The 406 survey responses were analysed using descriptive statistics, as well as drawing on Cognitive Information Processing (CIP) theory in an inductive analysis of freeform comments. Most respondents were aspiring to academic careers, but the pandemic led to the loss of job offers for 19.2% and altered career plans for 60.6%. Family circumstances impacted career decisions for 21.4% and these were complicated by mobility difficulties with border closures and visa issues. The impacts of the pandemic on careers were significantly greater for international graduates. The qualitative analysis revealed themes of uncertainty, complications, pragmatism and academia. Using CIP, it is apparent that the pandemic has created a more complex job environment and heightened stress and anxiety over career and mobility options. As shown in our conceptual model, NZ universities need to better prepare graduates for the landscape of career possibilities, making students aware of their attributes, supporting their wellbeing, and helping them navigate the complexity of the current job environment.
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- 2023
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42. Expansion of Doctoral Training and Doctorate Recipients' Labour Market Outcomes: Evidence from German Register Data
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Buenstorf, Guido, Koenig, Johannes, and Otto, Anne
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In many countries around the world, the number of new doctorate recipients graduating from universities has grown sharply in the past few decades, but the implications of this expansion for the employment situation of doctorate recipients remain largely unexplored in longitudinal studies. In Germany, as in various other countries, the expansion of doctoral education coincided with other changes in higher education that may have had a relevant impact on the careers of doctorate recipients. We explore the labour market outcomes of more than 98,000 doctorate recipients who graduated between 1995 and 2013. Focusing on differences among 19 annual graduation cohorts, we find that, beginning in the mid-2000s, newly graduating doctorate recipients had lower rates of full-time employment and were less likely to earn high incomes than graduates of the 1995-2000 period. At the same time, rates of inter-regional mobility have declined, and more new doctorate recipients remain employed in the academic sector. Differences across cohorts are robust to disaggregation along gender and disciplinary lines and persist for at least five years after graduation. We relate these findings to a stronger socialisation of doctoral students towards academic 'excellence', new employment options in university administration and management as well as increasing fixed-term employment in research projects. Our findings indicate that the expansion of doctoral education, as well as potential reforms in the training of doctoral candidates, must be analysed in the context of the respective university system.
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- 2023
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43. Mobilising Effective Schooling Provision to Support Innovative Education for Occupationally Mobile Families and Their Children
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Danaher, P. A.
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Occupationally mobile families exist in multiple forms globally. While these families contribute significantly to the socioeconomic life of the locations that they traverse, sometimes their mobilities generate hostility in those locations. This hostility in the form of an anti-nomadic/sedentarist ideology creates corresponding difficulties for the schooling options and outcomes of the children of these mobile families. This paper explores the educational applications and implications of the anti-nomadic/sedentarist ideology as experienced by occupationally mobile families globally, and investigates also several successful schooling approaches for their children. The analysis identifies effective forms of schooling provision implemented in specific ways in these distinctive learning contexts. The author posits that 'innovative' in relation to the education of occupationally mobile communities is enacted in the historically constructed and materially grounded mobilities of each community, and 'works' and 'makes sense' only when conceptualised with references to those mobilities.
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- 2023
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44. Should I Go or Should I Stay: Job Hopping in Malaysia Small Medium Enterprise (SME) Service Sectors
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Siew, Jia Fang, Wong, Siew Chin, and Lim, Chui Seong
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Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to determine the relationships between learning opportunities, person-organization fit, self-directedness career attitude and job hopping among generation Y employees in Malaysian small medium enterprise (SME) service sectors. Design/methodology/approach: Research data was gathered from a sample of 203 generation Y employees from SME service sectors in Malaysia. Partial least squares structural equation modelling is used to perform the data analysis in the present study. Findings: The results demonstrated that person-organization fit and self-directedness career attitude correlates significantly with job hopping among generation Y employees. However, there is no significant relationship between learning opportunities and job hopping. Research limitations/implications: This study provides an empirical framework for explaining the job hopping among generation Y employees in SME service based on the review of related careers. Originality/value: This study offers new insights into the predicting factors of job hopping among generation Y employees in the Malaysian context specifically.
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- 2023
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45. Market Mechanisms' Distortions of Higher Education: Punjabi International Students in Canada
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Marom, Lilach
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This study explores the experiences of Punjabi (i.e., from the Punjab region in India) international undergraduate students (hereafter PS) attending Canadian higher education through a case study of a teaching university in British Columbia. The primary focus is on unpacking how PS' experiences were underlined by labor mobility, immigration policies, and the marketization of international higher education. To recruit international students, many lower-tier Canadian universities apply a business model that relies heavily on agents. The outcome is that educational considerations are not central to admission and retention processes. The findings critique the Canadian education-migration model by identifying the complicity of Canadian higher education in lower-skill immigration and the negative educational and professional outcomes for PS that result from this complicity. The study highlights PS' voices and experiences that can go overlooked in the context of market-driven higher education.
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- 2023
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46. Social Origin and Access to Top Occupations among the Highest Educated in the United Kingdom
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In, Jung and Breen, Richard
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U.S. studies have found that stratified graduate education accounts for most of the relatively strong intergenerational socioeconomic association among postgraduate degree holders. The same association has been observed, but not explained, in countries with higher education systems that differ from that of the United States. We explore the mediation role of undergraduate- and graduate-level stratification in accounting for the intergenerational occupational association among postgraduate degree holders in the United Kingdom. We find that the unequal distribution of undergraduate-level education and path dependency between undergraduate- and graduate-level stratification help to give rise to an unequal occupational outcome by social origin among postgraduate degree holders. We explain this by the tight coupling of undergraduate and graduate education in the United Kingdom. Our analysis also illustrates the need to go beyond graduate education in understanding social origin inequality among postgraduate degree holders to examine the role of undergraduate education and how it is linked to graduate education.
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- 2023
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47. Studying Caste and Occupational Mobility in India: Questioning 'Positionality' In Ethnographic Research
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Sahoo, Barsa Priyadarsinee
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Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to discuss the challenges the author had encountered and the counter-strategies she had adopted to overcome them while conducting ethnography for the first time during her doctoral research. In this paper, the author hopes to provide guidance for future researchers by discussing the role she played in her research, the experiences she gained as a result of it, the difficulties she faced and the strategies she employed to overcome these difficulties. Design/methodology/approach: Following the social constructionist perspective, this paper analyses the experience that the author had gained during her field study. As a novice researcher, the author entered the field to study the relationship between caste and occupational mobility. The caste that she had selected was the Kansari caste to which the author belongs. Therefore, her position as a researcher while conducting ethnography became a crucial part of the methodological challenges the author faced. While insider ethnography has its advantages and disadvantages, this paper does not discuss these aspects of the methodology. Instead, it discusses how, as a novice researcher, the author had to negotiate her position as an insider and outsider. Findings: While analysing her experience as a novice researcher, the author found that her journey of conducting insider ethnography was of rediscovering herself as a Kansari as well as a researcher. Through this research, the author found that as an insider ethnographer, certain strategies had to be adopted in the field by the researcher to be objective and unbiased throughout the research process. For example, whenever the author conducted an interview, she tried to try to say less, listen more and be as objective as possible, without allowing her preconceptions to influence the information she gathered from the field. Originality/value: This is an original paper based on the primary data collected by the author.
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- 2023
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48. Career Paths of PhD Graduates in Eastern and Western Germany: Same Qualification, Same Labor Market Outcomes?
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Rehs, Andreas and Fuchs, Michaela
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This paper investigates to what extent the returns to a PhD depend upon the region of birth and the place of work. We examine the career paths of eastern and western German PhD graduates and estimate the returns to obtaining a job suited to their skill level and with high wages. Our data set combines information on graduates and their place of birth with administrative data. We find that the place of work rather than the region of birth affects labor market outcomes. Due to lower mobility, eastern German graduates profit less from adequate jobs located in western Germany.
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- 2023
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49. Changing Patterns of International Academic Mobility: The Experiences of Western-Origin Faculty Members in Turkey
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Seggie, Fatma Nevra and Çalikoglu, Alper
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International academic mobility has gained widespread attention in higher education as new hosting countries have emerged in addition to traditional destinations. In this changing environment, little emphasis has been placed on international academics in emerging non-Western destinations. This qualitative study examines the experiences of 18 Western-origin faculty members in Turkey, an emerging destination for international academics with its unique culture blending East and West, and explores their rationales for moving to Turkey, the positive experiences and challenges they have faced during their time in the country, and their career expectations. The findings indicate that the rationales, experiences, and expectations of Western-origin academics in Turkey are multifaceted and mostly differ from those in traditional destinations of international academic mobility. Benefitting from a comparative lens on traditional and emerging destinations, understanding the experiences of international academics in diverse country cases requires a multidimensional focus on individual and contextual elements.
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- 2023
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50. 'I'm in a Professional Twilight Zone': Exploring a Migrant Teacher's Professional Identities Construction in the UK
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John Trent
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This article reports the results of a qualitative study which explores the personal and professional identities construction journey of a migrant teacher of English as a second/additional language from Hong Kong, following her arrival in the United Kingdom. Grounded in a theory of language teacher identities and drawing upon Mikhail Bakhtin's theory of dialogue, the study uses narrative methods of inquiry to understand this migrant teacher's identities construction experiences. Findings suggest that a series of discursive struggles construct the meaning of the identity 'migrant teacher' and that these struggles manifest in multiple professional identities construction dilemmas for the teacher. The results contest the deficit positioning of migrant teachers, demonstrating how discursive forces can be marshalled in ways that create new and possibly hitherto unconsidered opportunities for their professional identities construction. Implications for policy makers, school leaders, and other teachers wishing to support migrant teachers are discussed and suggestions for future research considered.
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- 2023
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