Relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study

Emotional intelligence has been identified as an important characteristic of successful leaders. Fletcher argues that people who show such characteristics in the organisation often in line with the espoused organisational values "get disappeared from the organisational screen" (Fletcher, 1...

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Main Authors: Bickley, Maureen, Lord, Linley, Thomas, Gail
Other Authors: Therese Jefferson
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Women in Social and Economic Research, Curtin University of Technology 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31864
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author Bickley, Maureen
Lord, Linley
Thomas, Gail
author2 Therese Jefferson
author_facet Therese Jefferson
Bickley, Maureen
Lord, Linley
Thomas, Gail
author_sort Bickley, Maureen
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Emotional intelligence has been identified as an important characteristic of successful leaders. Fletcher argues that people who show such characteristics in the organisation often in line with the espoused organisational values "get disappeared from the organisational screen" (Fletcher, 1999, pp. 2-3). She refers to such work as relational practice and it is closely associated with the work that women often undertake in organisations. This Fletcher sees as leading to its devaluation. Women are expected to display a range of relational practices in the workplace. In universities one demonstration is the pastoral care roles that women take on and are expected to take on particularly as universities move more and more towards customer service models of operation. However they are not rewarded for such work, it is work that gets disappeared in the reward structures. In this exploratory study we interviewed I 0 academic women staff at Curtin Business School and using Fletcher's framework as a guide, asked them to comment on the range of tasks that they have observed others undertake that could be considered as relational practice. They also commented on their own relational practice in the academy. This presentation will provide an overview of the findings.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-318642022-11-21T05:19:41Z Relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study Bickley, Maureen Lord, Linley Thomas, Gail Therese Jefferson Linley Lord Nadia Nelson Alison Preston Emotional intelligence has been identified as an important characteristic of successful leaders. Fletcher argues that people who show such characteristics in the organisation often in line with the espoused organisational values "get disappeared from the organisational screen" (Fletcher, 1999, pp. 2-3). She refers to such work as relational practice and it is closely associated with the work that women often undertake in organisations. This Fletcher sees as leading to its devaluation. Women are expected to display a range of relational practices in the workplace. In universities one demonstration is the pastoral care roles that women take on and are expected to take on particularly as universities move more and more towards customer service models of operation. However they are not rewarded for such work, it is work that gets disappeared in the reward structures. In this exploratory study we interviewed I 0 academic women staff at Curtin Business School and using Fletcher's framework as a guide, asked them to comment on the range of tasks that they have observed others undertake that could be considered as relational practice. They also commented on their own relational practice in the academy. This presentation will provide an overview of the findings. 2007 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31864 Women in Social and Economic Research, Curtin University of Technology restricted
spellingShingle Bickley, Maureen
Lord, Linley
Thomas, Gail
Relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study
title Relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study
title_full Relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study
title_fullStr Relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study
title_full_unstemmed Relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study
title_short Relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study
title_sort relational practice in the academy: an exploratory study
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31864