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Géraldine Farges – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2025
Among the factors that encourage the quality of education internationally, the social status of teachers is attracting particular attention. To date, the scientific literature has insisted that teachers generally rank themselves in the middle of the social scale. There is not yet any empirical evidence that certain factors (for instance related to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Social Status
Smadar Donitsa-Schmidt – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2024
This study explores the evolution of teacher education in Israel from 1974 to 2024, analysing key policy actions, reforms, and initiatives that have shaped the field over the past five decades. During these years, extensive efforts were undertaken at the state level by the Ministry of Education and the Council for Higher Education to elevate the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Education Programs, Educational History, Educational Policy
Brennan, Janie; Fernandez, Todd; Tranquillo, Joe – To Improve the Academy, 2022
The professionalization of disciplines often leads to formalization of disciplinary training. As professionalization occurs, informal training roles are typically supplanted as the normative method of training but can continue to exist in parallel with formal methods. As in other fields, the ongoing professionalization of faculty development has…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Professional Recognition, Informal Education, Faculty Development
Pauline Mary Ross; Elliot Scanes – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2025
Australian higher education has faced both global economic and environmental challenges, including most recently the COVID-19 pandemic. To deliver in this resource constrained environment, academic workforce and academic roles are being reshaped. Teaching and education focused academic roles are rapidly increasing but come with opportunities and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society), Sustainability, Teaching (Occupation)
Scott McLean – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
For over forty years, presidents of the Summer School Association of Queen's University wrote annually to teachers across Canada, encouraging them to attend summer courses for credit toward a bachelor of arts. In the 1920s, presidents' messages associated attendance with societal progress and the professionalization of teaching. In the 1930s, such…
Descriptors: Educational History, Summer Schools, Universities, Foreign Countries
Adriana Villavicencio; Sarah Klevan; Chandler Patton Miranda; Reva Jaffe-Walter; Hua-Sebastian Cherng – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
While we know that professionalization improves outcomes for teachers, education policy has effectively "deprofessionalized" teachers, especially those who serve immigrant English Learners. Based on a three-year case study, this paper explores how teachers in an immigrant-serving school exercised autonomy and authority over their…
Descriptors: Professionalism, High School Teachers, Immigrants, English Language Learners
De Voto, Craig; Gottlieb, Jessica J. – Teachers College Record, 2021
Background/Context: In the United States, strengthening the professionalization of teaching and teacher education has received extensive attention. Notably, the educative Teacher Performance Assessment (edTPA) has gained traction. Developed by the Stanford Center for Assessment, Learning, & Equity (SCALE) in 2009, edTPA requires teacher…
Descriptors: Performance Based Assessment, Teacher Certification, Licensing Examinations (Professions), Stakeholders
Heffernan, Amanda; Bright, David; Kim, Misol; Longmuir, Fiona; Magyar, Bertalan – Australian Journal of Education, 2022
Concerns are mounting about the attraction and retention of teachers in Australian schools. This study draws upon a questionnaire of 2444 Australian primary and secondary school teachers, which revealed that only 41% of respondents intended to remain in the profession. Through a thematic analysis of the qualitative data within the questionnaire,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Persistence, Teaching (Occupation), Teaching Load
Willis, Alison; Thiele, Catherine; Dwyer, Rachael; Grainger, Peter; Simon, Susan – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2021
This paper presents the start-up methodology for a project that leverages the opportunities that social media affords to give teachers voice and agency. In response to negative press about teachers in mainstream media, coupled with research that shows that teachers are working hard to meet student academic and wellbeing needs, the researchers…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching (Occupation), Reputation, Social Media
McGill, Craig M. – NACADA Journal, 2018
Through the professionalization process, an occupation transforms into a profession. Although much scholarship has situated academic advising as a professional endeavor, in the past few years, the authors of two papers posited that advising is not a profession, a contention not shared by all within the advising community. Despite much scholarly…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Professional Recognition, Academic Advising, College Faculty
Saifullova, Razilia; Krapotkina, Irina; Pospelova, Nadezhda; Kayumova, Gelyusya – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2018
In modern historical science, interest in studying the problems of regional history has increased. In our opinion, the most relevant of them are the study of the creation, development and functioning of different types of educational institutions, the history of socio-economic development of the regions, the study of professional employment of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Status, Well Being, Professional Recognition
Molla, Tebeje; Nolan, Andrea – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2020
The primary purpose of this paper is to illustrate how a critical realist approach can add to our understanding of professional recognition of educators in a pre-school setting. Recognition is a function of personal achievement and social arrangement, and is understood through examining those subjective conditions and objective structures as…
Descriptors: Professional Recognition, Preschool Teachers, Child Caregivers, Foreign Countries
Clarke, Linda – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2018
This paper engages with key contemporary debates about teaching and teacher education through proposing an innovative, interdisciplinary model, the Place Model, which uses two senses of "place" to provide comparative lenses for a timely, a-priori examination of the place of the teacher: place in the humanistic geography tradition as a…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Faculty Development, Interdisciplinary Approach, Models
Rosewell, K.; Ashwin, P. – Studies in Higher Education, 2019
Despite the wealth of literature on academic work, roles and identities, the meaning of being an academic often does not go beyond such pre-defined and separate roles of teacher, researcher, academic, professional and manager. Consequently, our understanding of academic work is limited. This article explores the holistic meaning of being an…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Role
Robertson, Susan L.; Sorensen, Tore – European Educational Research Journal, 2018
This paper presents and engages with Basil Bernstein's rich conceptual grammar in order to generate a sociological account of the outcomes for teachers' work, identity and social class, of strategic shifts in governance to the global scale. Our aim is to develop a two-way conversation between Bernstein's conceptual grammar and how best to theorise…
Descriptors: Governance, Constructivism (Learning), Social Class, Professional Recognition