Winner of the 2021 Society of Professors of Education Outstanding Book Award Historically, Americans of all stripes have concurred that teachers were essential to the success of the public schools and nation. However, they have also concurred that public school teachers were to blame for the failures of the schools and identified professionalization as a panacea.   In Blaming Teachers, Diana D'Amico Pawlewicz reveals that historical professionalization reforms subverted public school teachers’ professional legitimacy. Superficially, professionalism connotes authority, expertise, and status. Professionalization for teachers never unfolded this way; rather, it was a policy process fueled by blame where others identified teachers’ shortcomings. Policymakers, school leaders, and others understood professionalization measures for teachers as efficient ways to bolster the growing bureaucratic order of the public schools through regulation and standardization. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth century with the rise of municipal public school systems and reaching into the 1980s, Blaming Teachers traces the history of professionalization policies and the discourses of blame that sustained them.
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In Blaming Teachers, Diana D'Amico Pawlewicz reveals that historical professionalization reforms subverted public school teachers’ professional legitimacy. Policymakers and school leaders understood teacher professionalization initiatives as efficient ways to bolster the bureaucratic order of the schools rather than as means to amplify teachers’ authority and credibility.
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Contents Introduction 1          “A Chaotic State”: The Rise of Municipal Public School Systems and the  Institutionalization of Teaching 2          To “Raise Teachers’ Profession to a Dignity Worthy of its Mission”: The Development of the Modern School Bureaucracy and Tenure Policies During the Progressive Era 3          Teacher Education and the “National Welfare”: Professional Preparation, Character, and Class During the Great DepressionContents Introduction 1          “A Chaotic State”: The Rise of Municipal Public School Systems and the Institutionalization of Teaching 2          To “Raise Teachers’ Profession to a Dignity Worthy of its Mission”: The Development of the Modern School Bureaucracy and Tenure Policies During the Progressive Era 3          Teacher Education and the “National Welfare”: Professional Preparation, Character, and Class during the Great Depression 4          “The Enlistment of Better People”: Responses to the Teacher Shortages of the Post World War II Years 5          “A Brave New Breed”: Teacher Power and Isolation, 1960 - 1980 Epilogue Acknowledgments Index
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“This accessible and appealing history has an important message for various stakeholders in the professional status and image of teachers.”

Product details

ISBN
9781978808430
Published
2020-08-14
Publisher
Vendor
Rutgers University Press
Weight
463 gr
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Thickness
18 mm
Age
01, G, U, P, 01, 05, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Biographical note

DIANA D'AMICO PAWLEWICZ is a historian of education reform and social policy and an assistant professor in Educational Foundations and Research at the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks supported by the Elnora Hopper Danley Professorship.