Looking Back and a Little Forward: Reflections on Professionalism and Teaching as a Profession

The author goes back to her earlier work on professionalization, in which she argued that aspiring professions aim at converting one order of scarce resources into another: credentials, as proxies for expertise, into protected opportunities, special status, and work privileges. This effort implied a...

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Main Author: Magali Sarfatti Larson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2014-05-01
Series:Radical Teacher
Online Access:http://radicalteacher.library.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/radicalteacher/article/view/112
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spelling doaj-856eb83acee142a5804b3fecf169e2002020-11-24T23:42:45ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghRadical Teacher1941-08322014-05-0199071810.5195/rt.2014.11263Looking Back and a Little Forward: Reflections on Professionalism and Teaching as a ProfessionMagali Sarfatti Larson0Temple UniversityThe author goes back to her earlier work on professionalization, in which she argued that aspiring professions aim at converting one order of scarce resources into another: credentials, as proxies for expertise, into protected opportunities, special status, and work privileges. This effort implied a tendency to monopoly and it was not easy to replicate after the classic professions of medicine and the law had consolidated their position in the early twentieth century. Professions born within large organizations are in a very different situation, even if they may aspire to the same status and autonomy at work. After discussing the shortcomings of her earlier work and the research questions that can still fruitfully be posed, the author considers the challenges that school teaching faces in our time. Universal mandatory education has been the watershed that transformed this occupation into what it is today: a huge category spread out at many levels, still predominantly female, highly educated, and, in many countries but not ours, following a civil service model. School teaching must also cope with the very high expectations that surround a universal service provided by an apparatus of the state. Professionalism imposed “from above” seems less promising for school teaching and their students in the U.S. than an enlightened union movement capable of self-criticism and self-reform.http://radicalteacher.library.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/radicalteacher/article/view/112
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language English
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author Magali Sarfatti Larson
spellingShingle Magali Sarfatti Larson
Looking Back and a Little Forward: Reflections on Professionalism and Teaching as a Profession
Radical Teacher
author_facet Magali Sarfatti Larson
author_sort Magali Sarfatti Larson
title Looking Back and a Little Forward: Reflections on Professionalism and Teaching as a Profession
title_short Looking Back and a Little Forward: Reflections on Professionalism and Teaching as a Profession
title_full Looking Back and a Little Forward: Reflections on Professionalism and Teaching as a Profession
title_fullStr Looking Back and a Little Forward: Reflections on Professionalism and Teaching as a Profession
title_full_unstemmed Looking Back and a Little Forward: Reflections on Professionalism and Teaching as a Profession
title_sort looking back and a little forward: reflections on professionalism and teaching as a profession
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Radical Teacher
issn 1941-0832
publishDate 2014-05-01
description The author goes back to her earlier work on professionalization, in which she argued that aspiring professions aim at converting one order of scarce resources into another: credentials, as proxies for expertise, into protected opportunities, special status, and work privileges. This effort implied a tendency to monopoly and it was not easy to replicate after the classic professions of medicine and the law had consolidated their position in the early twentieth century. Professions born within large organizations are in a very different situation, even if they may aspire to the same status and autonomy at work. After discussing the shortcomings of her earlier work and the research questions that can still fruitfully be posed, the author considers the challenges that school teaching faces in our time. Universal mandatory education has been the watershed that transformed this occupation into what it is today: a huge category spread out at many levels, still predominantly female, highly educated, and, in many countries but not ours, following a civil service model. School teaching must also cope with the very high expectations that surround a universal service provided by an apparatus of the state. Professionalism imposed “from above” seems less promising for school teaching and their students in the U.S. than an enlightened union movement capable of self-criticism and self-reform.
url http://radicalteacher.library.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/radicalteacher/article/view/112
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