Faculty Identities and the Challenge of Diversity

Faculty Identities and the Challenge of Diversity
Author: Anonim
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2015-11-17
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781317259770

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This book examines the undergraduate teaching experiences and collegial relationships of university faculty who hold appointments in social science, humanities, or natural science and engineering, and who have received undergraduate teaching or service-to-diversity nominations and awards. Documenting and interpreting faculty members' social identities and pedagogical practices, Faculty Identities and the Challenge of Diversity explores how professors address the diverse racial, ethnic, gender, and sexual identities of their students. By carefully considering how this unique group of faculty makes sense of their instruction and classrooms, this book provides practical advice that will prove beneficial to both experienced and new teachers looking to improve their practice in a changing educational landscape.

Faculty Identities and the Challenge of Diversity

Faculty Identities and the Challenge of Diversity
Author: Mark A. Chesler,Alford A. Young
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013
Genre: College teachers
ISBN: 1612051146

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Explores how academic teachers address the diverse racial, ethnic, gender, and sexual identities of their students.

The Challenges of Minoritized Contingent Faculty in Higher Education

The Challenges of Minoritized Contingent Faculty in Higher Education
Author: Edna Chun,Alvin Evans
Publsiher: Purdue University Press
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2023-11-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781612498386

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The Challenges of Minoritized Contingent Faculty in Higher Education offers a probing and unvarnished look at the employment challenges of these faculty members in four-year institutions. With dramatic shifts in the faculty workforce and nearly three-quarters of instructional positions in United States institutions now off the tenure track, contingent faculty have become the essential, frontline workers of higher education. Remarkably little research attention has focused on the experiences of minoritized contingent faculty in this new academic underclass. Based on in-depth interviews coupled with extensive research, the book highlights the double marginalization that can occur due to secondary employment status in the academic hierarchy, and the exclusion resulting from the intersectionality of nondominant social identities including race and ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, and disability. As the first-person narratives reveal, these faculty often struggle for acceptance, recognition, and rewards in the day-to-day academic environment, and they can face devaluation of their contributions. As a pragmatic and concrete resource, this book offers proactive workforce strategies and key structural and policy recommendations that will assist academic and administrative leaders, including presidents, provosts, department chairs, and chief diversity officers, in building more inclusive working conditions for contingent faculty.

Reexamining Racism Sexism and Identity Taxation in the Academy

Reexamining Racism  Sexism  and Identity Taxation in the Academy
Author: Tiffany D. Joseph,Laura E. Hirshfield
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 155
Release: 2023-10-24
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781000987386

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This book explores the diversity-related labour that marginalized faculty, students, and staff are expected to perform because of their social identities – i.e., “identity taxation” in US higher education institutions. It compiles new research on cultural and identity taxation to highlight how systemic racism and patriarchy perpetuate identity taxation in 21st century US academe. Amado Padilla coined the term “cultural taxation” nearly 30 years ago to outline the expectations that faculty of colour address diversity affairs on their campuses. In this insightful volume, Laura Hirshfield and Tiffany Joseph expand the concept, adopting the term “identity taxation” to accentuate the labour members of marginalized groups participate in due to their intersectional identities. Beyond bringing these terms into conversation with others highlighting marginalized academics’ experience, this volume empirically explores how identity taxation affects students and staff, not just the faculty who were the focus of previous scholarship. It provides insight into the consequences of taxation at a moment when change and dismantling structural racism is most needed in universities and society. Reexamining Racism, Sexism, and Identity Taxation in the Academy will be a key resource for academics, researchers, and advanced students of race and ethnic studies, education, research methods, sociology, and cultural studies.This book was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial Studies.

Doing Diversity in Higher Education

Doing Diversity in Higher Education
Author: Winnifred R. Brown-Glaude
Publsiher: Rutgers University Press
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2008-11-14
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0813545978

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Using case studies from universities throughout the nation, Doing Diversity in Higher Education examines the role faculty play in improving diversity on their campuses. The power of professors to enhance diversity has long been underestimated, their initiatives often hidden from view. Winnifred Brown-Glaude and her contributors uncover major themes and offer faculty and administrators a blueprint for conquering issues facing campuses across the country. Topics include how to dismantle hostile microclimates, sustain and enhance accomplishments, deal with incomplete institutionalization, and collaborate with administrators. The contributors' essays portray working on behalf of diversity as a genuine intellectual project rather than a faculty "service." The rich variety of colleges and universities included provides a wide array of models that faculty can draw upon to inspire institutional change.

Cases on Academic Program Redesign for Greater Racial and Social Justice

Cases on Academic Program Redesign for Greater Racial and Social Justice
Author: Cain-Sanschagrin, Ebony,Filback, Robert A.,Crawford, Jenifer
Publsiher: IGI Global
Total Pages: 383
Release: 2021-11-19
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781799884651

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Faculty and students confront persistent racial, economic, and social inequities in higher education locally, nationally, and globally. To counter these inequities, there has been a recent focus on universities providing an inclusive curriculum that serves the needs of students from a wide range of backgrounds. Inclusive and equitable courses and instruction are crucial in today’s world as calls for racial and social justice grow, particularly in higher education. Universities and instructors must take action and make changes to best serve their students. Cases on Academic Program Redesign for Greater Racial and Social Justice provides an equity-oriented practical guide for those in higher education who are engaged in the work of curricular reform or program development. It also explores practices and approaches to curriculum development that consider program quality and equitable outcomes as mutually beneficial and necessary outcomes. Covering a range of topics such as antiracism and mindful hiring, it is ideal for teachers, instructional designers, curricula developers, administrators, academics, professors, educators, researchers, those working in higher education, and students.

Critical Qualitative Inquiry

Critical Qualitative Inquiry
Author: Gaile S Cannella,Michelle Salazar Pérez,Penny A Pasque
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 221
Release: 2016-07-01
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9781315431154

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Critical approaches to qualitative research have made a significant impact on research practice over the past decade. This comprehensive volume of contemporary, original articles places this trend in its historical context, describes the current landscape of critical work, and considers the future of this turn. The book-includes contributions from some of the leading qualitative researchers on three continents;-consists of big-picture articles that describe the dimensions of this research tradition;-situates critical qualitative inquiry in the overall development and landscape of qualitative research.

Racial Battle Fatigue in Higher Education

Racial Battle Fatigue in Higher Education
Author: Kenneth J. Fasching-Varner,Katrice A. Albert,Roland W. Mitchell,Chaunda Allen
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2014-12-23
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781442229822

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Racial Battle Fatigue is described as the physical and psychological toll taken due to constant and unceasing discrimination, microagressions, and stereotype threat. The literature notes that individuals who work in environments with chronic exposure to discrimination and microaggressions are more likely to suffer from forms of generalized anxiety manifested by both physical and emotional syptoms. This edited volume looks at RBF from the perspectives of graduate students, middle level academics, and chief diversity officers at major institutions of learning. RBF takes up William A. Smith’s idea and extends it as a means of understanding how the “academy” or higher education operates. Through microagressions, stereotype threat, underfunding and defunding of initiatives/offices, expansive commitments to diversity related strategic plans with restrictive power and action, and departmental climates of exclusivity and inequity; diversity workers (faculty, staff, and administration of color along with white allies in like positions) find themselves in a badlands where identity difference is used to promote institutional values while at the same time creating unimaginable work spaces for these workers.