ABSTRACT

The first part of this book charts and analyses 2,688 working days of 384 teachers in 91 LEAs in 1991. It shows how they spent their working lives, how well matched their teaching was to their academic background, and the balance between teaching and other aspects of their work. The analysis uses five major categories: Teaching, Preparation, Administration, Professional Development and Other Activities. The authors argue that there is an occupational split between `the managers' and `the teachers'.
The second part comments on the findings by relating them to issues of school management, and teacher professionalism, arguing that `conscientiousness' poses a professional dilemma for secondary teachers.

part |1 pages

Part I The evidence

chapter 1|19 pages

TEACHERS AT WORK: IMAGES AND REALITY

chapter 2|27 pages

CHARACTERISTICS OF THE PARTICIPATING

ByTEACHERS

chapter 3|21 pages

TOTAL TIME ON WORK

chapter 4|16 pages

TEACHING AND THE CURRICULUM

chapter 5|19 pages

PREPARATION AND PROFESSIONAL

ByDEVELOPMENT

chapter 6|13 pages

ADMINISTRATION AND OTHER ACTIVITIES

chapter 7|16 pages

TEACHERS AND MANAGERS

part |1 pages

Part II Teacher professionalism and change