Schools are places of learning but they are also workplaces, and teachers are employees. As such, are teachers more akin to professionals or to factory workers in the amount of control they have over their work? And what difference does it make? Drawing on large national surveys as well as wide-ranging interviews with high school teachers and administrators, Richard Ingersoll reveals the shortcomings in the two opposing viewpoints that dominate thought on this subject: that schools are too decentralized and lack adequate control and accountability; and that schools are too centralized, giving teachers too little autonomy. Both views, he shows, overlook one of the most important parts of teachers' work: schools are not simply organizations engineered to deliver academic instruction to students, as measured by test scores; schools and teachers also play a large part in the social and behavioral development of our children. As a result, both views overlook the power of implicit social controls in schools that are virtually invisible to outsiders but keenly felt by insiders. Given these blind spots, this book demonstrates that reforms from either camp begin with inaccurate premises about how schools work and so are bound not only to fail, but to exacerbate the problems they propose to solve.
Lawson, M., McInerney, P., Hattam, R. and Smyth, J. (1998) Learning to Teach the Virtual Class: Teachers' Learning in the Open Access College Senior Secondary School of Distance Education. Adelaide: Flinders Institute for the Study of ...
Given the recent attention towards mental health and well-being, this book addresses these negative experiences and provides recommendations for dealing with them.
While on the one hand these new roles make new and perhaps increased work for teachers, it also holds that teachers who were feeling a loss of control over their own teaching work might feel enhanced control as they take on these ...
An authoritative guide to educational supervision in today’s complex environment The Wiley Handbook of Educational Supervision offers a comprehensive resource that explores the evolution of supervision through contributions from a panel ...
School Access In 1994, almost no classrooms in the United States had Internet access, regardless of poverty level. ... sample sizes (hundreds of thousands of students) that access to home computers can actually reduce test scores, ...
Annual Survey of State Student Assessment Programs, Fall 1996. Washington, D.C.: Council of Chief State School Officers. ———. 1997. Mathematics and Science Content Standards and Curriculum Frameworks: State Progress on Development and ...
This book is about the damage that has been systematically inflicted upon teachers' work globally over the past two or more decades. It chronicles and traces the major policy maneuvers...
As an avenue for progressive politics in a nation still skeptical of change, community organizing today faces significant challenges. This book assesses that activity within the context of political, cultural,...
";The text is both engaging and enjoyable, no easy feat for ethics."; Jeff Johnston, University of California Irvine Moral Education: A Teacher-Oriented Approach reveals the richness of moral education, as...