Spelling suggestions: "subject:"discrimination inn higher education."" "subject:"discrimination iin higher education.""
61 |
The tripartite self : gender, identity, and powerCadenhead, Juliet Kathryn, 1961- 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
|
62 |
The low percentage of African American faculty in a southern community college a critical perspective /Brown Burns, Annie Lou, January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Mississippi State University. Department of Leadership and Foundations. / Title from title screen. Includes bibliographical references.
|
63 |
Transformativity: recognising melancholic power, and renegotiating vulnerabilityKnowles, Corinne Ruth January 2010 (has links)
South African universities are embedded in an unequal society. Transformation strategies and interventions in the sector attempt to address this, but arguably, the policies and practices which aim to bring about transformation are merely platforms for potential change and do not guarantee the achievement of their aspirations. This study engages with the notion of transformation in one university, looking at how an organisation for women has contributed to transformation in individuals and in the institution. It explores the idea that vulnerability is the starting point of transformation, and must be recognized and incorporated into how an organisation, institution or individual regards vulnerable groups, in order to build a more equitable society. The reframing of vulnerability is a process of acknowledging the way power works, and arguably, power’s melancholic nature and expression in society and in universities has particular challenges with regard to how vulnerable groups experience their vulnerability. If the framing of an individual as vulnerable does not also provide that individual with the conditions that shelter the vulnerability they experience, leading to a renegotiation of whom they can become, their “vulnerable” status is entrenched. The study explores ways in which an organisation for women uses its legitimized platform for renegotiating subjectivities, norms and performances, and the potential this has for transformativity.
|
64 |
“Just trying to live our lives”: gay, lesbian and bisexual students’ experiences of being “at home” in university residence lifeMunyuki, Chipo Lidia January 2016 (has links)
Higher education in South Africa is faced with a paramount task to help erode the social and structural inequalities that have been inherited from the Apartheid system (Department of Education 1997; Council on Higher Education 2000:12). The findings from the Soudien Report (2008:116-117) point out that the post-Apartheid higher education system in South Africa is characterised by various forms of discrimination and institutional cultures that marginalise some members of institutions resulting in pervasive feelings of alienation. In the South African higher education field, the concept of a “home” for all has been used by a variety of commentators to depict a vision of what transformed, inclusive higher education institutional cultures might look like. In this thesis, I interpret the experiences of residence life on the part of gay, lesbian and bisexual students on a largely residential campus. I ask how gay, lesbian and bisexual students experience being “at home” in the campus’s residence system. The thesis is based on 18 in-depth qualitative interviews with students who self-identify as gay/lesbian or bisexual who have experienced residence life on the campus for a period longer than six months. A wide literature exists on the concept of “home”. Drawing from many different disciplines including anthropology, history, philosophy, geography, psychology, architecture and sociology, I distil the essential features of “at homeness” as incorporating comfort, privacy, security, acceptance, companionship and community. The research was concerned to inquire into how central the idea of home is to human flourishing and then into how gay, lesbian and bisexual students are routinely denied many of the essential comforts associated with being “at home” that heterosexual students have the privilege of taking for granted.
|
65 |
The Politics and Culture of Gender in British Universities, 1860–1935Rutherford, Emily Margaret January 2020 (has links)
This dissertation argues for the central role that higher education played in the making and remaking of gender difference as a fundamental organizing category of British politics and society. From the mid-nineteenth century, major legal, political, and economic shifts newly provided some—mostly elite—women with access to citizenship and the labor market. Nevertheless, gender segregation and gender difference remained essential to conceptions of women's participation in British politics and society. Across the same period, the number of universities in Britain doubled and national student intake more than tripled. Higher education became increasingly centralized and state-funded, and a degree increasingly became a professional qualification for both men and women. My dissertation examines the relationships between these changes and assesses their significance, moving beyond progressive accounts of women's formal admission to degrees. Drawing on extensive research in the archives of ten universities across England and Scotland, I show that gender was at the heart of faculty's, students', administrators', politicians', and donors' conceptions of what higher education was for, who should have access to it, and the extent to which universities should be funded by national government. Though expert opinion across Britain coalesced rapidly around the support of large coeducational research universities, this did little to alter gender difference as the fundamental organizing principle of university life. Campus relations between men and women remained conflicted, and the professional, social, and emotional lives of faculty and students remained largely gender-segregated—contributing to the lasting significance of gender difference for British politics and culture. I demonstrate these claims across three main sections of the dissertation, which cover how gender structured, respectively: the political and legal transformation of higher education, the culture of student life, and the relationship between faculty's careers and personal lives.
|
66 |
Medical School Admissions Across Socioeconomic Groups: An Analysis Across Race Neutral and Race Sensitive Admissions CyclesKennedy, Mike 05 1900 (has links)
While the relationship between academic variables and admission into medical school has been well documented, the relationship between socioeconomic background and admission has not been extensively examined. In 2001, the Texas Legislature passed HB 1641, which allowed for the use of socioeconomic variables in the admission of graduate and professional school students. Additionally, the Grutter v. Bollinger decision in 2003 removed a prohibition on the use of race or ethnicity in the admission of students in the state of Texas. The study examined the role medical school admissions selectivity as it relates to the socioeconomic background during a race neutral admissions cycle in 2005 and a race sensitive admissions cycle in 2006. The results of data analysis found that in a race neutral admissions cycle socioeconomic background was a significant factor in the admission of applicants to medical school. However, it was not a significant factor for applicants from underrepresented minority groups. The analysis also found that socioeconomic background was a significant factor in the admission of applicants to medical school in a race sensitive admissions cycle as well. Finally, the study found that variances in selectivity led to differences in the socioeconomic makeup of entering students across different medical schools. From the data analyzed in this study, it can be argued admission to medical school is in agreement with the sociological literature in that parental socioeconomic status is positively related to academic opportunities for their offspring.
|
67 |
Factors influencing the career progression of women in higher education : the case of the Durban University of TechnologyAwung, Mabel January 2015 (has links)
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Technology in Public Management, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2015. / This study aimed to investigate the factors influencing the career progression of women in higher education in general and South Africa in particular, using the case study of the Durban University of Technology. Recent research has shown that even though women have made some progress as compared to where they were twenty years ago, the progress of women has proven to be resistant to change in terms of higher level and rewarding positions (Turner 2012; Hofmeyr and Mzobe 2012; Botool and Sajid 2013; Mouley, 2013). According to Boushey and Farrell (2013:6), this lack of progress results from a lack of flexibility and unpredictable scheduling at the workplace. Others argue that career interruption for childbirth and rearing; domestic responsibilities; gender parities at the work place; organizational structures; and policies that do not meet the needs of female employees affect career progress (Wallace and Smith 2011:3 and Tsoka 2010:6). The purpose of the study was, therefore, to examine the nature of the progress of women in higher education, and to identify factors influencing their progress. The study was conducted at the Durban University of Technology with a sample of 250 women from academic and administrative units the stratified random sampling technique was used, in which the target population at the DUT was grouped into different strata, and then the sample elements were selected from each of the groups.
The study used both quantitative and qualitative research designs (mixed method), whereby self-administered questionnaires were used to collect the data. The questionnaire consisted of open-ended and closed ended questions. The closed- ended questions were quantitative, while the open ended questions were qualitative. The closed-ended responses were then analysed using SPSS, while the open ended responses used the inductive approach to highlight the factors influencing the career progression of women in higher education, thereby leading to recommendations on policies which would enhance career progression of women in higher education. The findings of the research revealed that women are still underrepresented in higher. It was recommended that management should improve working conditions for women and ensure that the effective monitoring and evaluation of the various policies in place.
|
68 |
Marching to a different beat : conversations about diversity with minority women students at a historically white universityDamons, Lynne 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)--Stellenbosch University, 2006. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Transformation of South Africa's historically white universities IS evidenced by a
diversification of their student and staff populations. The transition from exclusion to
inclusion of minority cultures in these university campuses has not been without its
challenges for those students. This study provides a record of the experiences of five
coloured women who are undergraduate students at Stellenbosch University (SU), a
predominantly white institution. The approach used is feminist, grounded participatory
action research.
Despite institutional policy initiatives, the Coloured undergraduate students in the study
did not experience the university environment as inclusive. What emerged was that the
women had an acute awareness of othernesses and their own minority status. Factors such
as the small number of minority students and the absence of symbols or icons that reflect
and acknowledge the presence of diverse cultures exacerbate their feeling of being in the
minority or 'tolerated otherness'. The women experienced SU as a university where
established practices and traditions continue despite the changing demographics of the
student population. This type of organisational culture in which covert and overt resistance
to transformation is the norm acts as a constraint on the political will to move from policy
to practice and entrenches the marginalisation of minority groups.
The study found that integration is left largely to personal initiative. Personal variables
such as resilience, strategies for coping with stress and the resolution of identity issues,
appear to playa key role in academic success. However, academic success is not always
accompanied by successful social integration. Social isolation was found to have a
negative impact on personal and academic confidence. Although the women in the study have had relatively negative experiences of
transformation, their willingness to engage in reflexive praxis and dialogue could serve as
a challenge to SU to engage in a process which acknowledges the concerns, resistance and
experience of all role-players. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die transformasie van histories-blanke Suid-Afrikaanse universiteite word gekenmerk aan
die diversifisering van hulle studente en personeel. Hierdie proses vind plaas deur die
geleidelike wegbeweeg van die algehele uitsluiting van die minderheidsgroepe op die
betrokke kampusse tot hulle volledige insluiting by aIle bedrywighede. Die proses is nie
sonder uitdagings vir die betrokke studente nie. In hierdie studie word die ervaringe
beskryf van vyf bruin vroulike voorgraadse studente aan die SteIlenbsoch Universiteit
(US), 'n oorwegend-blanke tersiere instelling. Vir hierdie studie is 'n feministiese
benadering wat gebaseer is op deelnemende aksienavorsing gebruik.
Ten spyte van institusionele beleidsinisiatiewe om genoemde transformasie te bespoeding,
het die voorgraadse bruin studente wat aan hierdie studie deelgeneem het, nie die
universiteitsomgewing as inklusief ervaar nie. Dit het eerder duidelik geword dat die
dames baie bewus was van hulle andersheid en hulle minderheidstatus. Faktore soos die
klein aantal minderheidstudente en die afwesigheid van simbole of ikone wat die
teenwoordigheid van diverse kulture reflekteer en erken, het hulle ervaring as behorende
tot 'n minderheidsgroep versterk. Die dames het die US ervaar as 'n universiteit waar
ingewortelde praktyke en tradisies voortgesit word ten spyte van die veranderende
demografie van die studentebevolking. Hierdie soort organisatoriese kultuur waar bedekte
en openlike teenstand tot transformasie die norm is, plaas 'n demper op die politieke
gewilligheid om van beleid na praktyk te beweeg en verdiep die marginalisering van
minderheidsgroepe.
Die bevindings van die studie is dat integrasie grootliks oorgelaat word aan persoonlike
inisiatiewe. Persoonlikeheidseienskappe soos gedetermineerde optrede, die benutting van
strategiee om stres te hanteer en identiteitskrisisse op te los, speel blykbaar 'n sleutelrol in
akademiese sukses. Akademiese sukses loop egter nie altyd hand aan hand met sosiale
integrasie nie. Daar is bevind dat sosiale isolasie 'n negatiewe impak op persoonlike en
akademiese vertroue het.
Alhoewel die ervarings van die dames wat aan die studie deelgeneem het relatief
negatiewe was ten opsigte van transformasie, was hulle tog gewillig om deel te neem aan
die reflektiewe praksis en dialoog. Hierdie feit dien as 'n uitdaging aan die Stellenbosch
Universiteit om betrokke te raak by 'n proses waarin die bekommemisse, weerstande en
ervaringe van aIle rolspelers hanteer word.
|
69 |
A Policy Discourse Analysis of U.S. Land-grant University Diversity Action PlansIverson, Susan Van Deventer January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
70 |
The contours of disadvantage and academic progress : analysis of perceptions of students from disadvantaged schools at the University of KwaZulu-Natal.Mpofu, Bhekimpilo. 23 July 2013 (has links)
The overall purpose of this study was to analyse the perceptions and experiences of students from
disadvantaged schools regarding their academic progress at the University of KwaZulu-Natal
(UKZN). The study focused on the students’ material and social circumstances, their learning
environment while at University, their connections to their home community, and their career
aspirations. It set to answer three key research questions, namely: (1) what are the contours of
disadvantage that can be discovered through investigating samples of students from disadvantaged
schools at UKZN? (2) How do the ‘contours’ seem to co-occur with factors relating to academic
progress? (3) What are the perceptions of students from disadvantaged schools at UKZN about their
pre-university experience and the learning environment at university? The notion of disadvantage was
defined using the Department of Education (DoE)’s classification of schools into the quintile system
which is based on measurements of the poverty of the catchment community. Thus, this study shows
that the notion of disadvantaged students in higher education can be investigated through class-based,
rather than merely racially-based definitions. This study was conducted within a three-fold conceptual
framework based on sustainable livelihoods approaches (SLA), social capital theory and social justice
ideology. The SLA approach teaches us that livelihoods can only be understood and captured in
particular contexts. This research project therefore aimed to gain a clearer understanding of such a
context, in this case, the campus environment. Through the phenomenological approach of the openended
questions in the interviews, this thesis taps into the perceptions of students themselves about
their environment and how they cope. Social capital theory postulates five spheres: the academic, the
social, the economic, the support, and the democratic. These were probed in both a survey of a sample
of disadvantaged students, and by interviewing eight students. With regard to academic progress, the
measurements used were the matric aggregate, the grade point average for salient years and
programmes, and the time it took for students to graduate or dropout. Comparisons are made between
the norm of students, the disadvantaged (those from low quintile schools), and those in the sample.
The purpose of utilizing such measurements is to contribute to the social justice discourse about
university education based on Taylor’s notion of Fair Equality of Opportunity (FEO), where
disadvantaged students’ abilities and aspirations can best be developed and exercised, leading to the
attainment of self-realization. Until disadvantaged students show academic progress that fits the norm,
the contours of their disadvantage need to be continually investigated; it is hoped that the findings of
this thesis will contribute to further research and concrete proposals which can be implemented to
improve conditions so that students who are already disadvantaged as a result of their schooling are
not further disadvantaged while at University . / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2013.
|
Page generated in 0.6492 seconds