The industrial realities of teaching are documented in history, sociology and policy research: studies of the school as workplace, the tools of teaching, processes within the workplace, the changing composition of the teaching workforce, the gender politics of the occupation, teacher organisations, and change in teachers’ work and employment relations. Teaching as a form of work is difficult to pin down because it involves an unspecifiable object of labour, a limitless labour process, and is, in a sense, unteachable. Teaching is always transformative labour, bringing new social realities into existence; and is also fundamentally interactive, not individual. Teachers’ work is not social reproduction, but is creative and therefore a site of social struggle. This can be seen in education in colonial societies, and in the global transformation of the education of girls and women. Teachers are now caught up in the neoliberal agenda, often unwillingly ‐ but since neoliberalism transforms institutions in the public sector, unavoidably, and sometimes traumatically. In a long historical perspective, the modern teaching workforce is unique, and has the possibility of shaping the learning capacities of the whole society; this may now be uniquely important.
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14 October 2009
Review Article|
October 14 2009
The work of teaching Available to Purchase
Raewyn Connell
Raewyn Connell
University Professor at the University of Sydney, a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2054-5649
Print ISSN: 0819-8691
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2009
History of Education Review (2009) 38 (2): 9–16.
Citation
Connell R (2009), "The work of teaching". History of Education Review, Vol. 38 No. 2 pp. 9–16, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/08198691200900009
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