Hard Graft: Collaborative exploration of working class stories in shaping female educator identities

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24377/prism.ljmu.0401219

Keywords:

Working class, collaborative autoethnography, female, Higher Education

Abstract

This empirical qualitative study investigates the ways in which working-class roots have shaped educator values and identity. Using collaborative autoethnography, we share an honest insight into the stories of seven female educators drawn together from a variety of health and social care disciplines. The five themes emerging from this research: Connection through differences and commonalities; graft; inner tensions; authenticity ‘I am who I am’ and the bigger picture are tightly interconnected, generating a complex and rich picture of contemporary female educator identity. This supportive and collaborative approach has been transformational in the realisation we are not alone, and it has provided a space to celebrate our ‘otherness’. As a result, we have embraced our collective responsibility to challenge inequalities and foster a more open, accessible and authentic HE future for all.

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E.Gillaspy PRISM 5(1) 2023

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Published

2022-06-23 — Updated on 2023-03-10

Issue

Section

General Research Papers