Developing the Teaching Profession: Autonomy, Professional Code, Knowledge Base
- 1 August 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Australian Journal of Education
- Vol. 27 (2) , 173-186
- https://doi.org/10.1177/000494418302700207
Abstract
Discussion is currently being carried on among some students of professionalism as to whether or not teachers can be regarded as professionals. In this paper it is suggested that teaching does not presuppose professionalism in the sense that the work of a doctor or lawyer does. The teacher does, however, have certain opportunities to act professionally. A necessary, though not sufficient, condition for this to happen is that the traditional knowledge base of the teacher (subject knowledge) be extended to include a knowledge base covering curriculum analysis, the school as an organization, and local development work. To sum up, teachers’ professionalism is characterized as independent acts based on an attitude of reflection on the aims society wants its schools to achieve.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Research into the School as an Organization. III: Organizational Development in Schools or Developing the School as an Organization?Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 1983
- Research into the School as an Organization. II: The School as a Complex OrganizationScandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 1982
- The School as an OrganizationJournal of Curriculum Studies, 1982
- Research into the School as an Organization. I: A Presentation and Discussion of Research Literature with a Bearing on the School as an OrganizationScandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 1982
- Teaching Professionalism to the Teaching ProfessionAustralian Journal of Education, 1981
- The Professionalization of Everyone?American Journal of Sociology, 1964
- The School as a Complex Social Organization: A CONSIDERATION OF PATTERNS OF AUTONOMYHarvard Educational Review, 1964