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29.11.2024 um 19:30 Uhr
Juggling Flaming Chain Saws
Academics in Educational Leadership Try to Balance Work and Family
von Jeffrey S. Brooks, Kathleen M. Brown, Joanne M. Marshall
Verlag: Information Age Publishing
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-1-61735-909-5
Erschienen am 02.08.2012
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 234 mm [H] x 156 mm [B] x 23 mm [T]
Gewicht: 646 Gramm
Umfang: 428 Seiten

Preis: 87,20 €
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Klappentext

Challenges of work-life balance in the academy stem from policies and practices which remain from the time when higher
education was populated mostly by married White male faculty. Those faculty were successful in their academic work
because they depended upon the support of their wives to manage many of the not-work aspects of their lives. Imagine a
tweedy middle-aged white man, coming home from the university to greet his wife and children and eat the dinner she's prepared for him, and then disappearing into his
study for the rest of the evening with his pipe to write and think great thoughts. If that professor ever existed, he is now emeritus.
Juggling Flaming Chainsaws is the first book in a new series with Information Age Publishing on these challenges of managing academic work and not-work. It uses the
methodology of autoethnography to introduce the work-life issues faced by scholars in educational leadership. While the experiences of scholars in this volume are
echoed across other fields in higher education, educational leadership is unique because of its emphasis on preparing people for leadership roles within higher education
and for preK-12 schools. Authors include people at different places on their career and life course trajectory, people who are partnered and single, gay and straight, with
children and without, caring for elders, and managing illness. They hail from different geographic areas of the nation, different ethnic backgrounds, and different types of
institutions. What all have in common is commitment to engaging with this topic, to reflecting deeply upon their own experience, and to sharing that experience with the
rest of us.