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At The MTPT Project we know that teaching can be a sustainable
career choice for parents, and in this essential handbook, we show
you how. Supported by case studies celebrating the best that the
family friendly schools and happy teachers in our community have to
offer, this book is a lifeline for both educators aspiring to
combine their passion for teaching with becoming a parent, and the
school leader who wants to empower them. However you become a
parent, or choose to grow your family and your career, this
handbook will provide you with the guidance and cheerleading that
you need to fulfil your personal and professional aspirations. The
book is divided into nine chapters, guiding readers from the first
considerations of family planning, all the way through to the
reality that some teachers and leaders may choose to leave
classrooms for good. Each chapter includes: the latest research on
working families legalities associated with different stages of
working parenthood (including discrimination and how to avoid it as
an employer and address it as an employee) case studies from our
community suggestions for individuals and schools recommended
further reading. Each chapter will help you to navigate the journey
from planning a family, to stepping in and out of teaching to suit
your parenting needs, to creating family friendly working
environments, whatever your role in school. With its mixture of
research-informed solutions, hints and tips, this text is perfect
for colleagues embarking on their parenting journey and school
leaders who want to take practical steps to retain and empower
valued colleagues.
This book is a critical disability studies examination of the lived
experience of chronic pain, engaging with and making a significant
contribution to crip theory and the concept of ‘crip time’.
Exploring experiences of pain and fatigue for people who live with
chronic pain and based on narratives told through in-depth detailed
interviews interwoven with theory at the cutting edge of critical
disability studies, it demonstrates that our knowledge and
understanding of chronic pain is incomplete without a critical
disability studies approach. Through conceptualizing the concept of
‘crip time’ via participants’ narratives of living with
chronic pain, chronic fatigue, and variable disabilities, this book
demonstrates how thinking about chronic pain and fatigue with
‘crip time’ exposes normative, ableist, assumptions underlying
both how pain and the ideas of cure and recovery are understood. It
will be of interest to all academics and students working in the
fields of disability studies, critical disability studies, crip
theory, medical sociology, sexuality, and studies of embodiment,
corporeality, and temporality more generally.
At The MTPT Project we know that teaching can be a sustainable
career choice for parents, and in this essential handbook, we show
you how. Supported by case studies celebrating the best that the
family friendly schools and happy teachers in our community have to
offer, this book is a lifeline for both educators aspiring to
combine their passion for teaching with becoming a parent, and the
school leader who wants to empower them. However you become a
parent, or choose to grow your family and your career, this
handbook will provide you with the guidance and cheerleading that
you need to fulfil your personal and professional aspirations. The
book is divided into nine chapters, guiding readers from the first
considerations of family planning, all the way through to the
reality that some teachers and leaders may choose to leave
classrooms for good. Each chapter includes: the latest research on
working families legalities associated with different stages of
working parenthood (including discrimination and how to avoid it as
an employer and address it as an employee) case studies from our
community suggestions for individuals and schools recommended
further reading. Each chapter will help you to navigate the journey
from planning a family, to stepping in and out of teaching to suit
your parenting needs, to creating family friendly working
environments, whatever your role in school. With its mixture of
research-informed solutions, hints and tips, this text is perfect
for colleagues embarking on their parenting journey and school
leaders who want to take practical steps to retain and empower
valued colleagues.
Demands for excellence and efficiency have created an ableist
culture in academia. What impact do these expectations have on
disabled, chronically ill and neurodivergent colleagues? This
important and eye-opening collection explores ableism in academia
from the viewpoint of academics' personal and professional
experiences and scholarship. Through the theoretical lenses of
autobiography, autoethnography, embodiment, body work and emotional
labour, contributors from the UK, Canada and the US present
insightful, critical, analytical and rigorous explorations of being
'othered' in academia. Deeply embedded in personal experiences,
this perceptive book provides examples for universities to develop
inclusive practices, accessible working and learning conditions and
a less ableist environment.
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