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Peer reviewedCallery, Peter – Nurse Education Today, 2000
Comparison of teacher education and nursing education in Britain shows how centralization and government control of quality assurance and funding diminished teachers' professional autonomy and subjected the profession to public policy shifts. The same could occur in the transfer of nursing education to a government-funded higher education system.…
Descriptors: Centralization, Educational Quality, Foreign Countries, Government Role
Peer reviewedMurray, Neil – ELT Journal, 1998
Language teachers are faced with a paradox: if they do not exert autonomy or respond flexibly to the teaching context, they can not produce significant results, and the language teaching field is criticized as inept and ill-informed; if they do exercise autonomy and flexibility to ensure learning, the field is criticized for lack of unity and…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Language Teachers, Professional Autonomy, Second Language Instruction
The New Zealand Qualifications Authority and the Universities: Progress towards a Unified Framework.
Peer reviewedRobson, Jocelyn – Journal of Vocational Education and Training: The Vocational Aspect of Education, 1996
The attempt to bring all postsecondary qualifications into a single qualifications framework has not been without a struggle between the New Zealand Qualifications Authority and the universities. The resolution of these issues has implications for policy developments in Britain. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Education, College Role, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries
Smethem, Lindsey; Adey, Ken – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2005
This article compares the experiences of small groups of newly qualified teachers before and after the introduction of statutory induction in England in 1999. It examines how far some of the beneficial outcomes of a structured induction programme advocated by Glickman and Bay (1990) have been evidenced by the experiences of the post-induction…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Professional Autonomy, Logical Thinking
Castle, Kathryn – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2004
The term autonomy has multiple meanings based on diversity in theoretical views in current educational literature. Examples are given of multiple meanings of autonomy, and comparisons are made to the Piagetian view of autonomy as self-regulation implying separateness within community. A case is made for the relevance of autonomy as an educational…
Descriptors: Piagetian Theory, Professional Autonomy, Early Childhood Education, Constructivism (Learning)
Dickinson, Greg M. – McGill Journal of Education, 2005
This paper argues that recent Charter decisions concerning the off duty expressive conduct of teachers have involved a narrow or "orthodox" interpretation of the reasonable limits on such expression. The author illustrates what he describes as a "messy area" by taking us through the controversial and well-known examples of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Behavior, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
Skott, Jeppe – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2004
Current developments in mathematics education require teachers to play a different and more profound role than few years ago. The first half of this article discusses the theoretical background of these developments in terms of their epistemological and meta-mathematical orientations. Based on this theoretical analysis, the teacher's new role is…
Descriptors: Teacher Qualifications, Mathematics Teachers, Mathematics Education, Professional Autonomy
Sutton, Rosemary E. – Assessment Update, 2005
Because assessment of student learning is mandated by accrediting bodies, many faculty and administrators feel coerced and so resist or even undermine assessment activities on campuses. In this article, the author describes how a prominent motivation theory called "self-determination theory" can be helpful in understanding the attitudes and…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Motivation, Self Determination, Locus of Control
Pearson, L. Carolyn; Moomaw, William – Journal of Educational Research, 2006
Although researchers have demonstrated a link between teacher autonomy and teacher motivation, job satisfaction, stress (burnout), professionalism, and empowerment, the task of identifying the underlying theoretical dimensions of teacher autonomy has met with varied results. The authors verified the existing 2-factor structure of the Teaching…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Professional Autonomy, Teacher Motivation, Reliability
Lee, Icy – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2008
Much of L2 teacher feedback research is conducted with advanced students in process-oriented classrooms in the United States. There is less published research about how school teachers in EFL contexts respond to student writing. Specifically little is known about why teachers respond to writing in the ways they do, and if discrepancies exist…
Descriptors: Professional Autonomy, Advanced Students, Feedback (Response), Foreign Countries
Perryman, Jane – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2007
In this paper I explore the emotional impact of inspection on the staff of a school in the two years between Ofsted inspections. Using data from one school undergoing inspection, I argue that the negative emotional impact of inspection of teachers goes beyond the oft-reported issues of stress and overwork. Teachers experience a loss of power and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inspection, Anxiety, Responses
Paige, Susan Mary – Teacher Education and Practice, 2007
The current shortage of teachers, owing primarily to retention and the shortfall in the field of special education, presents serious staffing concerns for serving children with special needs. Beyond supply considerations, teacher preparation programs are an integral part of the solution. Deci, Koestner, and Ryan (1999) described the role of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Teacher Education Programs, Job Satisfaction
Warwick, Paul – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2007
In the light of some of the aspirations for education expressed in the Plowden Report, this short piece considers the experiences of teachers in a "progressive" English independent school. There is a particular focus on what might loosely be termed job satisfaction. It is suggested that, whilst these teachers enjoy their work, they have…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Professional Autonomy, Private Schools, Accountability
Perlman, Daniel H. – AAHE Bulletin, 1989
The many paradoxes of the profession of the college president are discussed, with focus on whether the presidency is a profession to which a person should aspire and can prepare. Some people feel the position of presidency should only be filled by people with a love of scholarship and the intellectual life. The expectation, especially at the more…
Descriptors: Administrator Qualifications, Administrator Role, College Administration, College Presidents
Smyth, W. John – 1986
Properly construed, clinical supervision in education involves a true, collaborative collegiality among teachers in place of the traditional power relationship between teachers and dominant, "expert," administrator-level supervisors. By eliminating the power of the nonteaching supervisor to prescribe procedures for improving teaching,…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Peer Relationship, Power Structure, Professional Autonomy

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