1st Edition

Changing The Subject Women In Higher Education

Edited By Jocey Quinn, Sue Davies, Cathy Lubelska Copyright 1994
    224 Pages
    by Taylor & Francis

    First Published in 1994. How do women in the academy survive? How can women empower themselves? How can we develop feminist strategies in teaching, learning and research in Higher Education? Changing the Subject: Women in Higher Education explores these fundamental questions and presents strategies for changing and challenging the mainstream curriculum in Higher Education. Drawing on experience, research and theory, the contributors explore the contradictions that have to be managed by women in academia. The chapters analyse the interrelationship between women's roles and status as workers in higher education, their experiences as teachers and students, their representation within the curriculum, and the tensions between life in and out of the academy. Differences and inequalities between women are confronted: what it is to be an 'ebony woman' in the 'ivory tower', for example, or to be 'caught between two worlds' as a mother and academic. This diverse collection brings together everyday issues which women teaching and learning in higher education have themselves identified as important. It provides an opportunity to share the successes, struggles and practical strategies of women who are trying to change the 'subject' of higher education. This volume will be of relevance and interest to all those concerned with women's equality and wider educational issues on a personal and professional Level.

    WHEN (Women in Higher Education Network), Introduction, Part I: The Experiences of Women in Higher Education, Chapter 1. Being Different is a Very Difficult Row to Hoe: Survival Strategies of Women Academics, Chapter 2. Caught Between Two Worlds: Mothers as Academics, Chapter 3. Ivory Towers and Ebony Women: The Experiences of Black Women in Higher Education, Chapter 4. Fighting Back or Biting Back? Lesbians in Higher Education, Chapter 5. Women in Higher Education: What Are We Doing to Ourselves?, Part II: The Empowerment of Women in Higher Education, Chapter 6. Commonality and Difference: Theory and Practice, Chapter 7. Postgraduate Students: Empowering Ourselves, Chapter 8. Life Lines: Writing and Writer's Block in the Context of Women's Studies, Chapter 9. The Influence of Feminism on Black Women in the Higher Education Curriculum, Chapter 10. Empowering Disabled Women in Higher Education, Part III: Women Challenging the Mainstream Curriculum in Higher Education, Chapter 11. Is a Feminist Pedagogy Possible?, Chapter 12. Transforming the Household: Mature Women Students and Access to Higher Education, Chapter 13. Health and Caring in a Feminist Context, Chapter 14. Transforming the Curriculum, Contributors, Index

    Biography

    Sue Davies and Jocey Quinn job-share the post of Equal Opportunities Development Officer at the University of Central Lancashire, and coordinate the Women in Higher Education Network. Cathy Lubelska is Principal Lecturer in Social History and Women's Studies at the University of Central Lancashire.