ABSTRACT

This book offers an original and challenging theoretical and empirical approach to mapping the changing nature of teachers' work historically and in the contemporary period. It is an attempt to understand how and in what ways teachers' work has changed following the demise of the post-war settlement and the imminent collapse of teachers' project of professionalism secured through solidaristic strategies such as unionism. Dr. Robertson argues that in order to understand these issues, a more rigorous set of conceptual tools around social class, occupational power and worker control is needed. The first two sections of the book set out to address that problem. The final section elaborates on the changing contexts and conditions for contemporary teachers more generally, and argues that structural and ideological changes within educational provision have led to differing capacities in the realization of class assets.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

A Class Act: Teachers and Change

part I|30 pages

Conceptual Contours

part II|62 pages

Changing Contexts

part IV|32 pages

Critical Realities Reviewed

chapter 9|30 pages

Critical Realities Reviewed