Female managers responsible for running initial teacher training programmes at universities are finding themselves increasingly marginalised in their institutions, which have become more internally managerialist, according to a new study.
The women surveyed were âengaged in a struggle for survival individually and professionallyâ, with other senior managers seeing teacher training as a âthankless taskâ.
The paper, âSuccumbing, surviving, succeeding? Women managers in academiaâ, published in the journal Gender in Management, says that although female managers have âbroken through the glass ceilingâ, this achievement âhas come at a costâ.
Barbara Thompson, principal lecturer in childhood, social work and social care at the University of Chichester and author of the paper, told Times Higher Education thatÌęmiddle managers she spoke to for her research felt âbeleagueredâ.
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Their âstruggleâ to survive in the profession is a prominent theme in the paper, as managers accommodate for the changes in the teacher training landscape. Dr Thompson notes that in her sample, men âseem to have left the management of teacher training, and management roles in ITT are being largely undertaken by womenâ.
âPressures centred around greatly increased workloads caused by increased bureaucracy, frequently shifting quality assurance procedures and a lack of autonomy in carrying out their roles,â she said.
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She added that leaders in ITT were having to shift their management values from âpeople-centredâ to âfinance-drivenâ to make teacher training more efficient.
Dr Thompson writes that one of the most distressing results of this efficiency drive is that senior managers have had to deal with the âfalloutâ caused by institutional restructuring and downsizing.
âLine managers appeared to see teacher training as a âthankless taskâ and not even worthy of a permanent position,â Dr Thompson adds.Ìę
âAll the women, both middle and senior managers and leaders, spoke of the need to reinvent themselves as âtougherâ and to have to operate in more directive ways than some of them felt comfortable with,â Dr Thompson told THE.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Female managers in teacher training âstruggleâ
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