{"title":"博士试验和为人父母的苦难:采用以人为本的方法来支持两个时钟的滴答声","authors":"A. Kelly","doi":"10.19043/ipdj.131.010","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Women who are trying to carry out doctoral studies and build a career may find this time overlaps with their biologically optimal reproductive years. The assumption that this should oblige women to prioritise one or the other needs to be challenged and a person-centred approach adopted for students wishing to start a family during their PhD studies. Challenging this binaristic premise and taking person-centred approaches to support doctoral student mothers can help to encourage further women of childbearing age to undertake doctoral research training. Person-centredness is defined by McCormack and McCance (2017, p 3) as: ‘…an approach to practice established through the formation and fostering of healthful relationships between all care providers, service users and others significant to them in their lives. It is underpinned by values of respect for persons, individual right to self-determination, mutual respect and understanding. It is enabled by practice development.’ Research has shown that the ability of women to balance work and family responsibilities is a significant determinant of their ability to advance academically (Thanacoody et al., 2009). Studies have also demonstrated that women take longer than men to complete doctoral programmes and experience a lower publication rate compared with men as a result of family obligations (Velander et al., 2021). Equally, it has been shown that starting a family during academic studies can negatively affect women’s careers but not men’s (Acker and Webber, 2017). Combining motherhood and academic work within higher education has long been discussed and these discrepancies are significant when it comes to women developing research careers. So we need to ask, how can we adopt person-centred approaches to support doctoral student mothers in completing their PhD research and its associated publications as well as successfully navigating motherhood?","PeriodicalId":30387,"journal":{"name":"International Practice Development Journal","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"PhD trials and parenthood tribulations: adopting a person-centred approach to support the ticking of two clocks\",\"authors\":\"A. Kelly\",\"doi\":\"10.19043/ipdj.131.010\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Women who are trying to carry out doctoral studies and build a career may find this time overlaps with their biologically optimal reproductive years. The assumption that this should oblige women to prioritise one or the other needs to be challenged and a person-centred approach adopted for students wishing to start a family during their PhD studies. Challenging this binaristic premise and taking person-centred approaches to support doctoral student mothers can help to encourage further women of childbearing age to undertake doctoral research training. Person-centredness is defined by McCormack and McCance (2017, p 3) as: ‘…an approach to practice established through the formation and fostering of healthful relationships between all care providers, service users and others significant to them in their lives. It is underpinned by values of respect for persons, individual right to self-determination, mutual respect and understanding. It is enabled by practice development.’ Research has shown that the ability of women to balance work and family responsibilities is a significant determinant of their ability to advance academically (Thanacoody et al., 2009). Studies have also demonstrated that women take longer than men to complete doctoral programmes and experience a lower publication rate compared with men as a result of family obligations (Velander et al., 2021). Equally, it has been shown that starting a family during academic studies can negatively affect women’s careers but not men’s (Acker and Webber, 2017). Combining motherhood and academic work within higher education has long been discussed and these discrepancies are significant when it comes to women developing research careers. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
那些试图进行博士研究和建立事业的女性可能会发现,这段时间与她们生理上的最佳生育年龄重叠。认为这将迫使女性优先考虑其中之一的假设需要受到挑战,并对希望在博士学习期间组建家庭的学生采取以人为本的方法。挑战这种二元前提,采取以人为本的方法来支持博士生母亲,有助于鼓励更多的育龄妇女接受博士研究培训。McCormack和McCance(2017,第3页)将以人为中心定义为:“……一种通过形成和培养所有护理提供者、服务使用者和其他对他们生活有重要意义的人之间的健康关系而建立的实践方法。”它以尊重人、个人自决权利、相互尊重和理解的价值观为基础。它是通过实践开发实现的。研究表明,女性平衡工作和家庭责任的能力是她们学业进步能力的重要决定因素(Thanacoody等人,2009)。研究还表明,由于家庭责任,女性完成博士课程所需的时间比男性长,发表率也低于男性(Velander et al., 2021)。同样,研究表明,在学术研究期间组建家庭会对女性的职业生涯产生负面影响,但对男性却没有影响(Acker和Webber, 2017)。在高等教育中将母性和学术工作结合起来的问题已经讨论了很长时间,当涉及到女性发展研究事业时,这些差异是显著的。因此,我们需要问,我们如何采用以人为本的方法来支持博士生母亲完成博士研究及其相关出版物,并成功地引导母亲?
PhD trials and parenthood tribulations: adopting a person-centred approach to support the ticking of two clocks
Women who are trying to carry out doctoral studies and build a career may find this time overlaps with their biologically optimal reproductive years. The assumption that this should oblige women to prioritise one or the other needs to be challenged and a person-centred approach adopted for students wishing to start a family during their PhD studies. Challenging this binaristic premise and taking person-centred approaches to support doctoral student mothers can help to encourage further women of childbearing age to undertake doctoral research training. Person-centredness is defined by McCormack and McCance (2017, p 3) as: ‘…an approach to practice established through the formation and fostering of healthful relationships between all care providers, service users and others significant to them in their lives. It is underpinned by values of respect for persons, individual right to self-determination, mutual respect and understanding. It is enabled by practice development.’ Research has shown that the ability of women to balance work and family responsibilities is a significant determinant of their ability to advance academically (Thanacoody et al., 2009). Studies have also demonstrated that women take longer than men to complete doctoral programmes and experience a lower publication rate compared with men as a result of family obligations (Velander et al., 2021). Equally, it has been shown that starting a family during academic studies can negatively affect women’s careers but not men’s (Acker and Webber, 2017). Combining motherhood and academic work within higher education has long been discussed and these discrepancies are significant when it comes to women developing research careers. So we need to ask, how can we adopt person-centred approaches to support doctoral student mothers in completing their PhD research and its associated publications as well as successfully navigating motherhood?