DZHW Website | https://www.dzhw.eu/ |
DZHW Website | https://www.dzhw.eu/ |
🌟 Wir suchen ab dem 01.09.2025 am Standort Hannover einen Sachbearbeiter:in Projekt-Finanzsteuerung (m/w/d)! 🌟
Du hast Erfahrung im Finanz-Controlling, bist zahlenaffin und möchtest in einem engagierten Team arbeiten? Dann bist du bei uns genau richtig!
🔹 Deine Aufgaben:
Laufendes Finanz-Controlling unserer Projekte
Erstellung von Finanz-Reports und Kostennachweisen
Unterstützung bei Kalkulationen und Projektbeantragungen uv.m.
Hier geht es zum Angebot: https://karriere.dzhw.eu/jobposting/870c50690f9609c67b4b4ab613b91d7d02ef8d920?ref=homepage
Die „Studierendenbefragung in Deutschland“ liefert umfassende Daten zur Lebensrealität von Studierenden – von sozialen und wirtschaftlichen Bedingungen über Studienverlauf und -bedingungen bis hin…
🚀 Our #INNBI project just had its first official meeting — and it’s already taking off on the wings of scientific progress!
Bringing together partners from 🇺🇦 🇦🇲 🇬🇪 🇲🇩 🇩🇪, we're building a network of national bibliometric infrastructures to share harmonized, curated data and elevate the visibility of diverse research systems.
🔗 Project info:
https://www.dzhw.eu/en/forschung/projekt?pr_id=756
#MeetTheData: Die Folien zur gestrigen Veranstaltung zu #EUROSTUDENT vom @DZHW und dem @fdz_dzhw finden Sie unter diesem Link:
https://www.forschungsdaten-bildung.de/fileadmin/FDB/Downloads/Meet-the-Data/Meet-the-Data_EUROSTUDENT_20250509.pdf
Am 12. Juni geht es weiter mit der #Volkshochschulstatistik vom @DIE_Bonn. Hier geht's zur Anmeldung: https://www.forschungsdaten-bildung.de/training-beratung/meet-the-data/
Unsere Kollegin Kristina Hauschildt spricht beim online Seminar ‘Inequalities in access and success in higher education: what does research and data show?’. Dieses Seminar markiert den Start der ersten globalen Community von WAHEN zum Thema Forschung und Daten zur Chancengleichheit in der Hochschulbildung.
🗓️ 27. Mai 2025
🕒 13:00 Uhr - 14:30 Uhr
🔗Regristierung und weitere Infos gern hier: https://wahen.cmail19.com/t/t-e-gothn-ttuujitls-u/
This systematic literature review sheds light on social inequalities in students’ access to and experiences of international student mobility (ISM) in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic. Following a scoping approach based on the 2020 PRISMA guidelines, it synthesises 48 empirical studies published in the most intense phase of the Covid-19 pandemic, namely between January 2020 and June 2022. The findings demonstrate that the social inequalities that became visible due to the pandemic relate to different study abroad phases (before, during, and after ISM) and levels of analysis (micro, meso, and macro level). At the micro level, the four most frequently examined dimensions of social inequality comprise (1) students’ mental health and wellbeing, (2) experiences of exclusion, discrimination, or racism, (3) financial vulnerability, and (4) determinants of study abroad plans. At the meso level, the reviewed studies mostly address (5) institutional support services. Macro-level studies focus on (6) governmental policies and negative public perceptions of international students. The review demonstrates that the pandemic not only exacerbated previously known social inequalities, but also created new ones, which were experienced by students mostly whilst they were abroad. It also highlights that different social inequalities are connected to specific study abroad phases, student groups, and social structures. Moreover, it shows that the inefficiency or lack of support of both meso- and macro-level structures may enhance the social vulnerability of specific groups of international students. Overall, the review indicates that during the most intense phase of the Covid-19 pandemic, scholarly attention has shifted from inequalities in access to ISM to the lived experiences of international students.