ABSTRACT

What is it like to be a primary teacher? The first detailed study of the personal and professional experience of primary teachers in England and Wales, Primary Teachers Talking makes extensive use of verbatim evidence supplied by teachers during interviews in their first decade of work and again ten years later. In Part I Jennifer Nias discusses the importance attached to the ways in which primary teachers see themselves and the main dimensions of that self-image. In Part II, she examines the subjective experience of 'being a primary teacher', looking at the main factors which contribute to job satisfaction and dissatisfaction, and at teachers' relationships with their colleagues. She shows that to 'feel like a teacher' is to learn to live with dilemma, contradiction and paradox and - at its best - to experience in their resolution the creative satisfactions of the artist.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part |69 pages

Part one

chapter Chapter one|14 pages

Teaching And The Self

chapter Chapter two|16 pages

The Nature Of The Teacher's ‘Self’

chapter Chapter three|19 pages

Defending The Self In Teaching

chapter Chapter four|18 pages

The Development Of Personal Concerns

part |134 pages

Part Two

chapter Chapter five|20 pages

Job Satisfaction Among Primary Teachers

chapter Chapter six|32 pages

Job Dissatisfaction Among Primary Teachers

chapter Chapter eight|27 pages

Life In Staffrooms: Wider Horizons

chapter Chapter nine|21 pages

‘Feeling Like A Teacher’

chapter Chapter ten|13 pages

Conclusion