How Ideal Worker Norms Shape Work-Life for Different Constituent Groups in Higher Education : New Directions for Higher Education, Number 176
How Ideal Worker Norms Shape Work-Life for Different Constituent Groups in Higher Education : New Directions for Higher Education, Number 176
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Author(s): He
Ward, Kelly
Wolf-Wendel, Lisa E.
ISBN No.: 9781119347576
Pages: 112
Year: 201701
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 36.25
Status: Out Of Print

EDITORS' NOTES 5 Lisa Wolf-Wendel, Kelly Ward, Amanda Kulp 1. Academic Motherhood: Mid-Career Perspectives and the Ideal Worker Norm 11 Kelly Ward, Lisa Wolf-Wendel Based on a longitudinal, qualitative study, this chapter explores how mid-career tenured women faculty members, who are mothers and academics, manage multiple roles. The researchers use life-course perspectives and feminist theory to challenge ideal worker norms and institutional contexts that support such norms. 2. Contingent Faculty as Nonideal Workers 25 Adrianna Kezar, Samantha Bernstein-Sierra Drawing on an analysis of existing literature, this chapter examines how work norms and work-life concerns affect the growing number of non-tenure track faculty. The chapter demonstrates the importance of understanding the diversity of contingent faculty experiences and of underemployment to explain their work lives rather than notions of the ideal worker. 3. Work-Life Balance and Ideal Worker Expectations for Administrators 37 Kelly E.


Wilk This chapter focuses on the work-life experiences of male and female administrators at a private, doctoral institution where ideal worker norms constrained administrator behavior. 4. Ideal for Whom? A Cultural Analysis of Ideal Worker Norms in Higher Education and Student Affairs Graduate Programs 53 Margaret W. Sallee Focusing on graduate student-parents in higher education and student affairs master's degree programs, the researcher considers how programmatic structures and interactions with faculty and peers reflect and reproduce a culture across graduate programs that privileges the norm of the always-working student. 5. Undergraduate Single Mothers' Experiences in Postsecondary Education 69 Sydney Beeler This chapter looks at how undergraduate single mothers navigate ideal student expectations. The author reviews current literature to explore how single mothers are counter to "ideal student" norms and presents policy and best practice recommendations. 6.


The Effects of Parenthood During Graduate School on PhD Recipients' Paths to the Professoriate: A Focus on Motherhood 81 Amanda M. Kulp Based on a quantitative national study of doctoral degree recipients, the researcher focuses on the career-related resources doctoral students attain during graduate school and the influence of those resources on PhD-earning mothers' attainment of tenure-track faculty jobs at U.S. higher-education institutions. 7. Complexity of Work-Life Identities and Policy Development: Implications for Work-Life in Higher Education 97 Jaime Lester The final chapter integrates the themes throughout the chapters to explore what ideal worker norms mean for future research, policy, and practice. The author offers research and policy recommendations related to the groups discussed throughout the volume to provide a path forward for colleges and universities wanting to attract and retain a diverse student body and workforce. INDEX 107.



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