Approximately 85,000 part-time teaching staff working in further education (FE) and adult and community learning (ACL) are often seen as ‘a problem’. The intrinsic ‘part-timeness’ of these staff tends to marginalise them: they remain under-recognised and largely unsupported. Yet this picture is over-simplified. This article examines how part-time staff make creative use of professional autonomy and agency to mitigate problematic ‘casual employment’ conditions, reporting on results from Learning and Skills Development Agency-sponsored research (2002–2006) with 700 part-time staff in the learning and skills sector. The question of agency was reported as a key factor in part-time employment. Change is necessary for the professional agency of ...
This dissertation is about part-time professional work arrangements - how they are created and sust...
This article considers teacher professionalism from a neglected perspective. It analyses assumptions...
This paper discusses the reasons that one group of paraprofessionals offered to explain their decisi...
Approximately 85,000 part-time teaching staff working in further education (FE) and adult and commun...
Approximately 85,000 part-time teaching staff working in further education (FE) and adult and commun...
This research reports on a further investigation into the original data collected by the 2002/03 Lea...
This Universities and College Union Launch Event presentation reported on the findings of Learning a...
Part-time teachers form an increasingly large part of the workforce within the Academy, in the UK an...
The proportion of part-time university teachers has risen steeply in the last decade, reflecting cha...
Part-time teachers form a growing proportion of the global HE workforce. Their backgrounds can vary...
Globally universities rely on sessional staff to teach. The outcome of this reliance is that the maj...
Part-time teachers in higher education form a diverse group, and one that is increasing as employmen...
Unprecedented increase in access to higher education over the past decade, particularly in the UK an...
This research project investigates how the experiences of full-time employees undertaking part-time ...
Part-time work presents a conundrum. Across industrialised countries, there has been significant gro...
This dissertation is about part-time professional work arrangements - how they are created and sust...
This article considers teacher professionalism from a neglected perspective. It analyses assumptions...
This paper discusses the reasons that one group of paraprofessionals offered to explain their decisi...
Approximately 85,000 part-time teaching staff working in further education (FE) and adult and commun...
Approximately 85,000 part-time teaching staff working in further education (FE) and adult and commun...
This research reports on a further investigation into the original data collected by the 2002/03 Lea...
This Universities and College Union Launch Event presentation reported on the findings of Learning a...
Part-time teachers form an increasingly large part of the workforce within the Academy, in the UK an...
The proportion of part-time university teachers has risen steeply in the last decade, reflecting cha...
Part-time teachers form a growing proportion of the global HE workforce. Their backgrounds can vary...
Globally universities rely on sessional staff to teach. The outcome of this reliance is that the maj...
Part-time teachers in higher education form a diverse group, and one that is increasing as employmen...
Unprecedented increase in access to higher education over the past decade, particularly in the UK an...
This research project investigates how the experiences of full-time employees undertaking part-time ...
Part-time work presents a conundrum. Across industrialised countries, there has been significant gro...
This dissertation is about part-time professional work arrangements - how they are created and sust...
This article considers teacher professionalism from a neglected perspective. It analyses assumptions...
This paper discusses the reasons that one group of paraprofessionals offered to explain their decisi...