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Sue Cronshaw; Peter Stokes; Alistair McCulloch – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
This article contributes to the growing evidence based on well-being in doctoral study. It draws on 35 qualitative, in-depth interviews to explore how the well-being of an understudied group--working doctoral student mothers--is affected when undertaking part-time PhDs. While there is a growing literature on the research student experience and an…
Descriptors: Sex Role, Well Being, Mothers, Part Time Students
Qudsia Kalsoom – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2024
This case study is based on the study entitled "COVID-19: experiences of teaching-mothers in Pakistan". The study was conducted in 2020 to understand the lived experience of being a Pakistani teaching-mother during lockdown for COVID-19. This case study provides an overview of the chosen research and specifically discusses the decisions…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Decolonization, Employed Women, Mothers
Chloe R. Gibbs; Jocelyn Wikle; Riley Wilson – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
As women increasingly entered the labor force throughout the late 20th century, the challenges of balancing work and family came to the forefront. We leverage pronounced changes in the availability of public schooling for young children--through duration expansions to the kindergarten day--to better understand mothers' and families' constraints.…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Young Children, Employed Women, Mothers
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Galili, Iris – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2023
This article addresses the interplay between motherhood and working as a professional educator. It focuses on female educators' relationships in the public sphere and private sphere, and how these two spheres inform and impact one another. The research aims to establish the degree and extent to which societal dictates affect women's identities in…
Descriptors: Mothers, Females, Women Faculty, Employed Women
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Ikonen, Hanna-Mari; Korvajärvi, Päivi – Gender and Education, 2023
Based on the identification of the discourse of choice in debates on neoliberalism, meritocracy and post-feminism, this article analyses how highly educated mothers position themselves within the discourse of choice and use "choice" as their discursive resource when reflecting on how their demanding careers combine with motherhood. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Researchers, Neoliberalism
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Chikasie Ruth Ikpeama – SAGE Open, 2024
The growing number of working mothers, dual career couples, and working single parents raises concerns about the impact of work stress on family lifestyles and their ability to balance work and family obligations. The aim of this study is to examine the role of social workers in promoting work-life balance among working mothers at the University…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Employed Parents, Family Work Relationship
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Liana Christin Landivar; William J. Scarborough; Leah Ruppanner; Caitlyn M. Collins; Lloyd Rouse – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2023
Public schools in the United States saw unprecedented reductions to in-person instruction during the 2020-2021 school year. Using the Elementary School Operating Status database, the American Community Survey, and the Current Population Survey, we show remote instruction was associated with reduced employment among mothers compared with fathers…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Mothers, Distance Education, COVID-19
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Brito, Natalie H.; Werchan, Denise; Brandes-Aitken, Annie; Yoshikawa, Hirokazu; Greaves, Ashley; Zhang, Maggie – Child Development, 2022
The first months of life are critical for establishing neural connections relevant for social and cognitive development. Yet, the United States lacks a national policy of paid family leave during this important period of brain development. This study examined associations between paid leave and infant electroencephalography (EEG) at 3 months in a…
Descriptors: Infants, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Leaves of Absence, Mothers
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Pinto, Ofir Y.; Raz, Raanan – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2021
Using records from the National Insurance Institute of Israel, we recognized all children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD, N = 8072) or hearing loss (HL, N = 2231) born in Israel between 2005 and 2010. Typical developed children were taken from a random 20% sample of children born during the same years (N = 227,492). Analyses were adjusted for…
Descriptors: Birth, Children, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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Albrecht, Sarah; Hill, Colleen M. – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2022
This is a critical autoethnography which seeks to weave through the identities of teacher and mother during COVID-19. Using Bronfenbrenner's Bioecological Systems Theory to place the experiences of the authors within the concepts of resilience and thriving, coding results suggested that both authors experienced similar emotions and disruptions to…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Autobiographies, Ethnography
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Cronshaw, Sue; Stokes, Peter; McCulloch, Alistair – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2022
This article examines the lived experience of working women with 'children' (defined as under 18 years old) undertaking part-time PhD study. While there is much literature on the isolation of doctoral experience, the issue of, 'mothers' and all this identity may entail, has been overlooked. Drawing on 35 in-depth interviews, the experiences of…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Mothers, Doctoral Students, Communities of Practice
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Özkan, Banu – International Journal of Curriculum and Instruction, 2021
This qualitative study aimed to compare the scientific process skills of 5-6 years old preschool children in kindergartens where Reggio Emilia approach was implemented and not implemented. For this purpose, upon obtaining consent forms from the parents, in total 80 purposefully selected children participated in the study; 35 in a kindergarten…
Descriptors: Science Process Skills, Scientific Literacy, Reggio Emilia Approach, Preschool Education
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Cynthia Adlerstein-Grimberg; Blanca Barco – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2024
This article unpacks ECE professional associations and unions (ECEPAUs) pathways of resistance to a 'Universal Nursery Policy Project' (UNPP) and how ECEPAUs have reconceptualized the professionalism of the nursery within the Chilean neoliberal agenda. Drawing on a post-qualitative methodology, with three datasets of participant observations,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Professional Associations, Unions
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Anne Fensie; Teri St. Pierre; Jennifer Jain; Asli Sezen-Barrie – Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 2024
Adult learners are a significant proportion of distance learners and many of these students are working mothers. Several instructional design models center the learner, and this requires understanding the learner needs, strengths, and context. There is a gap in the literature describing the experience of modern working mother students in distance…
Descriptors: Mothers, Employed Parents, Employed Women, Adult Students
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Rice, Mary F.; Dallacqua, Ashley K. – Learning, Media and Technology, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic brought new tensions in determining how to enact representations of the professional and personal selves alongside digital technologies. In this paper, we explore those tensions as entangled enactments of agencies and identities related to simultaneous mothering and scholaring. Drawing on Barad's agential realist framework,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Technology, Mothers
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