Naming Assumptions
By Rosalie Arcala Hall September 8, 2010 10:00 pmFor women in the academy, one’s name is akin to a passport which under no circumstance must you tamper with. Your reputation as a scholar is attached to your name, which when subjected to a Google search, may yield only a few or a substantial number of hits depending on if it is correctly remembered or spelled. Unlike men, marriage pressures women to decide whether or not to make this changed civil status a separate “name reality” from their professional one. It is a tough choice to make.
Within my age and professional cohorts, I am a statistical outlier. First, I wanted a name that reflects a connection to my husband, a fact that some of my more liberal colleagues find counterintuitive. I also wanted my maiden surname spelled out to honor my local roots. Upon
This Article On The Dangers Of Outsourcing Entry Level Work To AI Can Be
Applied To Schools, Too
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The Perils of Using AI to Replace Entry-Level Jobs is a really
interesting article in the Harvard Business Review. So many companies are
hiring far fewer...
4 hours ago