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Edith Cavell; Part-time working men; Women and blindness; Children's Emergency Rescue

How more men working part-time could be key to unlocking women's potential in the workplace. Plus gender and blindness, and remembering Edith Cavell. Presented by Sheila McClennon.

Sheila McClennon is joined by neonatal consultant Dr Hazel Talbot and Lisa, the mother of Chance, a 14-year-old boy who urgently needs a heart transplant. Both are featured in a new series for tv2, Children's Emergency Rescue, narrated by Fiona Bruce and made by tv Yorkshire.

Sheila asks whether more part time men could be the key to unlocking women's potential in the workplace and talks to Professor Tom Schuller about his theory, 'The Paula Principle', of why women aren't fulfilling their potential in the workplace, and why there needs to be a transformation of attitudes to part-time working if women are to get ahead.

There is a new online petition to have Edith Cavell's image on a limited edition £2 marking the centenary of WW1, Cavell's biographer discusses her life.

And escaping the perceptions of, and stereotypes around, blindness, isn't it harder women than it is for men?

Presenter: Sheila McClennon
Producer: Rozina Breen
Editor: Nicola Swords.

Available now

58 minutes

Chapters

  • Part-time working men

    Could this be the key to unlocking women's potential in the workplace?

    Duration: 09:51

  • Campaign to put Edith Cavell on a coin

    Edith Cavell’s biographer discusses her life and why she should be honoured in this way

    Duration: 08:41

  • Children's Emergency Rescue

    A mother of a patient and a doctor featuring in the documentary talk about the service

    Duration: 10:56

  • Landmark Birthdays Feedback

    Woman’s Hour listeners reckon they’ve “still got it”!

    Duration: 01:58

  • Gender & Blindness: do we treat blind women differently from blind men?

    Blind opera singer Denise Leigh and partially blind academic Hannah Thompson discuss

    Duration: 09:14

Part-time working men

A new book, to be published later this year, will say that in order to close the gender equality gap in the workplace, more men need to work part time. ‘The Paula Principle’ is the female mirror of the ‘Peter Principle’ a management theory which suggests that people will tend to be promoted until they reach their ‘position of incompetence.’ It’s author, Dr Tom Schuller, suggests that – for too long – the closing of the gap has relied on women working to a male model and that now, if women are to achieve their full potential, men need to start taking a more female approach.

Campaign to put Edith Cavell on a coin

A new is calling for Edith Cavell to feature on a £2 coin, as one in a new series being issued by The Royal Mint over the next four years to mark WW1. Edith Cavell was a a nurse, shot at dawn by a German firing squad for her resistance work in helping hundreds of allied soldiers escape occupied Belgium. Cavell’s biographer, Diana Souhami is a supporter of the campaign, and tells Sheila why she deserves thehonour.

Children's Emergency Rescue

Next week sees the start of a new series on tv2, made by tv Yorkshire and narrated by Fiona Bruce. The three hour-long documentaries follow the work of doctors and nurses at Embrace, a medical team based near Barnsley in South Yorkshire and dedicated to transporting very sick children from local hospitals to specialist units throughout the North. Two women at the centre of episode 1Dr Hazel Talbot, a Neonatal consultant and Lisa McLoed, the mother of a teenager who urgently needs a heart transplant join Sheila in the studio.

Landmark Birthdays Feedback

Earlier this week, we took a look at after the press celebrated Kate Moss turning 40 with the headline ‘Kate’s still got it at 40’.But since when did 40 mean over the hill? You sent us your views…

Gender & Blindness: do we treat blind women differently from blind men?

In her recent autobiography, ‘I Didn’t See That Coming’,Andrea Begley, last year’s winner of TV reality show, ‘The Voice’, described how she loved the competition because it wasn’t about razzmatazz and image, but about the contestants being judged purely on their sound. However,as a blind person appearing on a reality show, she also admitted to being wary, albeit only initially, that she could be portrayed as trying to trade on the sympathy vote.How easy is it for blind people to escape the perceptions society sometimes places upon them , and is it harder for blind women than blind men?To discuss, Sheila is joined by Hannah Thompson, a partially blind academic from Royal Holloway University of London and by professional soprano, Denise Leigh, who is also blind.

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Sheila McClennon
Interviewed Guest Hazel Talbot
Interviewed Guest Tom Schuller
Producer Rozina Breen

Broadcast

  • Fri 24 Jan 2014 10:00

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