Since there are few female lecturers, some universities use videoconferencing to have male professors teach female students without face-to-face contact.
In 1893 she became the first female lecturer at the University of Cambridge Local Examinations & Lectures Syndicate.
She was the first female part-time lecturer at the ULg.
In 1872 he wrote an unfavorable column about a female lecturer at the school, accusing her of "seeking liberties" with the young boys in their boarding house.
In 1916, she also became the first female lecturer in anthropology at Oxford University, supported by the Mary Ewart Trust.
The hosts of the lectures have been predominantly male, with only four female lecturers hosting the events since their inception.
In 1906 she finally became the first female lecturer in Finland.
The female lecturer, brandishing a chalk-tipped ebony pointer, was hectoring the seated crowd in a voice of shrill but closely measured fanaticism.
She returned to Cambridge in 1984 as a fellow of Newnham College and the only female lecturer in the Classics faculty.
In 1961 she became the first female lecturer at Monash University, lecturing in literature.