학술논문

The Everyday Work of Rural-Serving Community College STEM Faculty: Lessons from an Institutiona.
Document Type
Article
Source
Thresholds in Education; Fall2023, Vol. 46 Issue 3, p495-514, 20p
Subject
University faculty
Community colleges
Social norms
Educational planning
Rural education
University towns
Wyoming
Language
ISSN
01969641
Abstract
Rural-serving community college (RSCC) STEM faculty play an essential role for their students and communities. We employed an institutional ethnographic (IE) approach to elucidate the social and ruling relations organizing the everyday work of RSCC STEM faculty in Wyoming. Our data confirm that RSCC educators see students at the center of their work. They detailed gaps and barriers to STEM transfer and explained administration and policy impact on their work, and described work that is invisible. Faculty’s feelings of isolation and connection were inextricably linked to social networks and administrator acknowledgement. We explicate a problematic wherein RSCC administrators not centering the student when making decisions grinds with faculty’s philosophical and practical focus on student-centered work. Based on our findings, we hope to persuade readers with our practice implications as you question whose interests are being served and the role that power and politics play in the everyday RSCC work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]