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Women and Leadership in Distance Education in Canada: Acknowledgements

Women and Leadership in Distance Education in Canada
Acknowledgements
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  • Project HomeWomen and Leadership in Distance Education in Canada
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Acknowledgements
  3. Introduction
  4. 1. An Old Buffalo Speaks: Reflections on My Years of Leadership in Distance Education and Online Learning
  5. Section I: Planning Learning
    1. 2. Decolonization in Distance Education: Trying to Lead through Possibility and Good Relationships
    2. 3. Not Just a Pretty Course: Aesthetic Leadership in Distance Education
    3. 4. Leading Distance Learning in Canadian Higher Education: The Three Cs
    4. 5. Leadership in Distance Education: Vision Is Vital
    5. 6. Building Alternative Futures: Co-Creating an Online Asynchronous Degree Program for Early Childhood Educators
  6. Section II: Communicating and Collaborating
    1. 7. Through a Glass Darkly: Middle-Level Leadership in an Era of Online Education
    2. 8. Leading In, Through, and Beyond a Crisis
    3. 9. Interpersonal Communication: A Critical Reflection Tool
    4. 10. First Year by Distance Education and Campus Manitoba: A Manitoba Women’s Story
    5. 11. A Strategic Response to the Demands of the Pandemic: A Black Woman’s Leadership Story
  7. Section III: Reflecting on Experiences
    1. 12. Hurry Slowly: A Conversation about Leadership in Distance Education through Multiple Roles
    2. 13. What’s up, Doc? The Impacts of Graduate Study for Women
    3. 14. (Re-)Envisioning Instructor Leadership Strengthened through a Decolonizing and Culturally Responsive Lens
    4. 15. Carving Out Spaces
    5. 16. Breaking Barriers and Leading from the Middle: A Racialized Woman Educator’s Experiences
    6. 17. The Leadership of Walking Alongside
    7. 18. Leading at a Distance: Insights and Practical Advice for Early Career Women in Higher Education Leadership
    8. 19. Female Leadership in Online Education in Canada: Reflecting and Forging the Future
  8. Conclusion
  9. Contributors

Acknowledgements

We are inspired by the dedication and perseverance of women distance educators worldwide. Some are recognized in this book, but many remain unheard or underacknowledged. We especially value the contributions of the pioneers and visionaries who designed distance education services and programs to serve students’ learning needs. We recognize the authors who have shared their stories, contributing to a rich narrative tradition of leadership in Canadian distance education, which continues to evolve.

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