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Showing 1 to 15 of 41 results Save | Export
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Vincent Carpentier; Emmanuelle Picard – Comparative Education, 2024
This historical exploration of the development of the academic workforce in the UK and France was triggered by the observation of significant similarities in contemporary debates on casualisation, and segmentation despite their distinctive HE systems. We develop a quantitative history of academic staff to understand why the differences in the two…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Higher Education, Data Analysis
Habiba Braimah – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Black women's pathway into the professoriate is an area of academic research that has been largely understudied. Contemporary research investigating the lack of representation of Black women in the professoriate reveal that the underrepresentation of Black women in faculty positions is the result of complex and intersecting factors, including…
Descriptors: Blacks, Women Faculty, College Faculty, Labor Market
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Cerna, Lucie; Chou, Meng-Hsuan – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2023
Taking the migration-higher education nexus as an analytical entry point, we address the question: How can we account for different internationalisation outcomes? We focus on three actors involved in the global race to internationalise higher education activities: higher education institutions (HEIs), states, and migrants. We argue that the…
Descriptors: International Education, Higher Education, Outcomes of Education, Strategic Planning
Pritchard, Adam; Li, Jingyun; McChesney, Jasper; Bichsel, Jacqueline – College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, 2019
The population of the United States is getting older. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), older workers -- which the BLS defines as those who are 55 and older -- made up 22% of the U.S. workforce in 2016, nearly double the 12% recorded in 1995. This increase is largely "fueled by the aging baby-boom generation, a large…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Higher Education, College Faculty, Labor Force
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Woodson, Thomas S.; Harsh, Matthew; Foley, Rider – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2018
Science, Technology & Society (STS) graduate programs primarily train graduate students to work in tenure track academic jobs. However, there are not enough tenure track academic jobs to match the supply of STS graduate students, nor does every STS graduate student want to become an academic. As a start to addressing these challenges, we…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Science Education, Science and Society, Technological Advancement
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Komochkova, Olga – Comparative Professional Pedagogy, 2017
We have performed comparative analysis on professional training of linguists at British and Ukrainian universities at administrative and managerial, legislative, organizational and pedagogical, systemic, conceptual, socioeconomic levels. As evidenced above, British and Ukrainian systems of professional training of linguists differ significantly,…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Comparative Education, Linguistics, Foreign Countries
Canadian Association of University Teachers, 2015
For decades, Canada has relied on migrant workers to help develop the economy. Many come to Canada through the Federal government's Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP). The original intent of this program was to fill very specific jobs on a short term basis--jobs that required specific workers and skills not available in Canada. In the last…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Migrants, Public Policy, Labor Market
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Castillo, Jose M.; Curtis, Michael J.; Tan, Sim Yin – Psychology in the Schools, 2014
Concerns regarding whether a sufficient supply of school psychologists exists have been evident for decades. Studies have predicted that school psychology would face a critical personnel shortage that would peak in 2010, but continue into the foreseeable future. The current study is a 10-year follow-up investigation based on previously published…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Personnel Needs, Labor Market, Supply and Demand
Medina, Brenda – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Colleges looking to hire junior faculty members are enjoying something of a buyer's market these days. With job offers scarce in many fields, small, teaching-intensive colleges and regionally oriented state universities have been able to snag recent graduates of the nation's top programs, the kinds of candidates who would have probably gone to…
Descriptors: Research Universities, State Universities, Doctoral Programs, Labor Market
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Kersey, Pamela – Journal of Applied Research in the Community College, 2012
The health and safety of the public relies heavily on an adequate supply of nurses. The majority of California nurses receive their training in community colleges where the nursing faculty shortage is expected to worsen in the next ten years. The experience of new nursing faculty in community colleges has not been studied or reported in academic…
Descriptors: Nurses, Hospitals, Labor Market, Labor Needs
Jenkins, Rob – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Facing an academic job market that seems only to get worse each year, many doctoral students are now willing to explore the possibility of a community-college career. In any hiring cycle, about 40 percent of the available teaching positions are at two-year campuses. Moreover, a surprisingly large number of Ph.D. students are actually, and…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Information Needs, Community Colleges, College Faculty
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Finney, Sara J.; Pastor, Dena A. – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 2012
To address the shortage of professionals in measurement, it is essential that we make young career-seekers aware that measurement is an option as a profession. In this paper, we discuss how creating a strong pipeline of students into our field involves personal interactions between faculty representing the graduate programs in measurement and…
Descriptors: Recruitment, Labor Market, Labor Supply, Supply and Demand
Wilkinson, Leah; Vander Putten, Jim – Online Submission, 2010
The economic downturn that began in the United States in 2008 has influenced higher education in similar ways to retrenchment in the early 1970s. Institutional budget constraints have expedited long-term declines in the number of full-time, tenure track faculty positions available in many academic disciplines, especially the humanities. This…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Labor Market, Faculty Recruitment, College Faculty
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Mitchell, Douglas E.; Yildiz, Selin; Batie, Michael – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2011
Community colleges employ more than one-third of the nation's higher education faculty. Nevertheless, the labor market through which faculty are recruited, selected, hired, evaluated and retained or replaced is one of the least understood aspects of these institutions. Functional management and effective policy both require a clear understanding…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Community Colleges, Labor Market, Labor
Graduate Management Admission Council, 2011
In this report, the Graduate Management Admission Council[R] (GMAC[R]), in cooperation with MBA Career Services Council and EFMD, presents the results of the 2011 Corporate Recruiters Survey, the tenth annual survey of business graduates' employers. The primary purposes of this study are to examine the job market for graduates from MBA and other…
Descriptors: Employer Attitudes, Administrator Education, Personnel Selection, Student Attitudes
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