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Editorial 18:3 Celebrating women in higher education on International Women’s Day

机译:编辑18:3庆祝高等教育妇女在国际妇女节

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We have timed publishing our first standard issue of the year to coincide with International Woman’s Day, 8 March 2021 to celebrate the contribution women have made to higher education. The first woman documented as teaching in a university was more than 800 years ago, and yet it is only the last century that the number of female academics has started to increase (Whaley, 2011). In Australia, the first university was established in 1851, yet it would be another 32 years until Julia Guerin graduated in 1883 from the University of Melbourne with a Bachelor of Arts (Hons) in 1883 (Women's Museum of Australia, 2020). And another 10 years when Leonora Little graduated from Melbourne University with a Bachelor of Science in 1983. Despite these accomplishments in the late 19th century, it was not until 1959 when the first woman, Dorothy Hill, was awarded a Chair appointment (Chair of Geology) in an Australian university, and nearly a century before Australia has its first female Vice Chancellor, when Dianne Yerbury became the Vice-Chancellor of Macquarie University in 1987, a position she held for twenty years. Australia’s higher education history tells a clear story of the slow integration of women in higher education, particularly within the STEM fields. For example, Little graduated in 1893 with a Bachelor of Science, but it was 1928 before the first female Lecturer in Mathematics, Ethel Raybould was appointed, and another 36 years before Hanna Neumann became the first female Professor of Pure Mathematics in 1964. It was just over 60 years ago that Margaret Williams-Weir was the first female Indigenous Australian to graduate with a university qualification in 1959. Female Indigenous Australians remain under-represented in the Australian university graduate population. The current situation for Australian higher education still retains a dominance of males within academic roles, such as 30 percent more men in Associate and Full Professor roles than women (Devlin, 2021). And whilst there has been progress in some jurisdictions, such as the majority of Queensland vice chancellors are women in 2021, these continue to be the exception, for example only 28% of vice chancellors in Australia are women. International Woman’s Day is an opportunity to reflect on the significant contribution women make in higher education in Australia and globally. We celebrate through the publication of this issue, with many female authors from across higher education globally.
机译:我们已经定时出版了我们的第一个标准问题,与国际女子节重合,2021年3月8日庆祝妇女对高等教育的贡献。作为大学教学的第一个被记录的女性超过800年前,但它只是上个世纪,女性学者的数量已经开始增加(Whaley,2011)。在澳大利亚,第一个大学成立于1851年,才将在1883年毕业于1883年的墨尔本1883年毕业于1883年(澳大利亚女子博物馆,2020年),这将是另外32年。另外10年的莱昂罗拉毕业于1983年的科学学士学位。尽管19世纪后期的这一成就,但直到1959年,当第一个女子多萝西山被授予主席委任(地质主席)在澳大利亚大学,澳大利亚近一个世纪有第一个女性副校长,当时伊尔伯里于1987年成为麦格理大学副校长,她二十年举行了一席之地。澳大利亚高等教育历史讲述了妇女在高等教育中缓慢融合的清晰故事,特别是在干田内。例如,在1893年的学士学位毕业于1893年,但它是1928年在数学的第一位女性讲师之前,哈哈Nana Nanna Neumann在1964年成为纯纯数学的第一个女教授。它是在60多年前,Margaret Williams-Weir是1959年的第一个毕业于大学资格的女性土着澳大利亚。澳大利亚大学研究生人口的女性土着澳大利亚人仍然代表。澳大利亚高等教育的现状仍然保留了学术作用中的男性的主导地位,例如30%的男子员工和伴随着妇女的教授(Devlin,2021)。而在一些司法管辖区的进展情况下,如2021年的大多数昆士兰州副校长是女性,这些妇女继续是例外,例如,澳大利亚仅有28%的副校长是女性。国际妇女节是一个有机会反思澳大利亚和全球高等教育的重要贡献妇女。我们通过这个问题的出版物来庆祝,许多女性作者来自全球高等教育。

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