Teacher professionalism: Chinese teachers' perspectives

IF 1.6 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Christopher W. Day, Alyson Simpson, Qiong Li, Yan Bi, Faye He
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Seventeen teachers in early, middle and later career phases were recruited from a convenience sample of primary and secondary schools in Beijing. Qualitative data analyses of individual interviews, and cross case comparative analyses were conducted.FindingsThe analyses of the data from Beijing indicated that almost all teachers emphasised their strong moral purposes and commitment to teach to their best, despite identifying the challenges of workload, school contexts and cultures and personal circumstances, which tested their resolve. In contrast, concerns about teacher autonomy and agency, which were common in the Australian study and other published research literature, were not highly visible in the Chinese data.Research limitations/implicationsThe authors acknowledge that this study was small scale and data were collected from a narrow sample from one urban region of China, and we should be cautious with the generalisability of findings to other regions and schools of China since there are significant discrepancies between developed coastal areas and large cities and the remote rural areas in China. Furthermore, interview data were only collected once, restricting insight to a snapshot in time. This research may be seen as an encouragement to researchers from other regions and countries to further explore the impact of socially situated understandings of teacher professionalism on practice. Future research could also benefit from utilising multiple data sources, longitudinal design and cross-cultural collaborations to further explore the challenge of defining teachers' understandings of professionalism locally while engaging with global perspectives.Practical implicationsThe practical implications relate to (1) expanding conceptualisations of teacher professionalism by developing locally nuanced understandings of perceptions and enactments of professionalism in different contexts across the profession, which take account of the unique roles of national and local cultural contexts; (2) designing initial teacher education and continuing professional development programmes so that they take account of the influences on the professions' ideals and individual teacher identities, of the ideological and practical interplay in the workplace of structures such as mandated standards, and different socio-economic geographical settings (e.g. rural and urban); (3) designing leadership development programmes that take account of research on associations between school leaders' values, qualities and practices on school cultures and their effects on teachers' well-being, and capacities and capabilities to fulfil their understandings of being professionals and teach to their best.Social implicationsThe social implications relate to (1) further research on the associations between the effects of external policy demands on teachers' work and work–life tensions, teachers' sustained commitment and quality; and (2) further research on the impact of the collective influences of national cultures, broad-based policy conditions, personal values and the demands of particular schools, parents and students that influence teachers' experience, perceptions and enactments of professionalism in order to provide further insights into understanding the complexity of teachers' lives and promoting teachers' sustained enactments of professionalism in broad contexts.Originality/valueThe research findings, though tentative, revealed that the altruistic nature of their mission to serve students and the parental community was the dominant marker of professionalism for teachers in China, regardless of school structures, cultures, academic achievement imperatives and personal circumstance; and that their professionalism was informed by the socio-cultural formation of individual and collective moral responsibility, reinforced through national educational policies. These findings differed from the concerns reported by the teachers in the Australian study, which aligned with literature that suggests that teacher professionalism is being eroded through neo-liberal government policies, excessive workloads and performance-oriented cultures. Though the comparative data set is small, these findings suggest that whilst there are increasing policy convergences across nations, which seek to define teacher professionalism through their abilities to make improvements in students' measurable academic achievement, how teachers in different countries and cultures define themselves as professionals may differ.","PeriodicalId":44790,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Professional Capital and Community","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Professional Capital and Community","FirstCategoryId":"95","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/jpcc-01-2022-0004","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"教育学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

PurposeThis study aimed to investigate associations between the organisational and cultural contexts in which Chinese teachers work, the influence of these on their understandings of professionalism, and relationships between these and their perceived willingness and commitment to be effective in teaching to their best.Design/methodology/approachThe research was part of a two-country collaboration between the universities of Beijing and Sydney into Australian and Chinese teachers' perceptions of influences on their professionalism in which research protocols were jointly developed and implemented. This paper focusses mainly upon the Chinese research but also refers to key differences between Australian and Chinese teachers' perspectives. Seventeen teachers in early, middle and later career phases were recruited from a convenience sample of primary and secondary schools in Beijing. Qualitative data analyses of individual interviews, and cross case comparative analyses were conducted.FindingsThe analyses of the data from Beijing indicated that almost all teachers emphasised their strong moral purposes and commitment to teach to their best, despite identifying the challenges of workload, school contexts and cultures and personal circumstances, which tested their resolve. In contrast, concerns about teacher autonomy and agency, which were common in the Australian study and other published research literature, were not highly visible in the Chinese data.Research limitations/implicationsThe authors acknowledge that this study was small scale and data were collected from a narrow sample from one urban region of China, and we should be cautious with the generalisability of findings to other regions and schools of China since there are significant discrepancies between developed coastal areas and large cities and the remote rural areas in China. Furthermore, interview data were only collected once, restricting insight to a snapshot in time. This research may be seen as an encouragement to researchers from other regions and countries to further explore the impact of socially situated understandings of teacher professionalism on practice. Future research could also benefit from utilising multiple data sources, longitudinal design and cross-cultural collaborations to further explore the challenge of defining teachers' understandings of professionalism locally while engaging with global perspectives.Practical implicationsThe practical implications relate to (1) expanding conceptualisations of teacher professionalism by developing locally nuanced understandings of perceptions and enactments of professionalism in different contexts across the profession, which take account of the unique roles of national and local cultural contexts; (2) designing initial teacher education and continuing professional development programmes so that they take account of the influences on the professions' ideals and individual teacher identities, of the ideological and practical interplay in the workplace of structures such as mandated standards, and different socio-economic geographical settings (e.g. rural and urban); (3) designing leadership development programmes that take account of research on associations between school leaders' values, qualities and practices on school cultures and their effects on teachers' well-being, and capacities and capabilities to fulfil their understandings of being professionals and teach to their best.Social implicationsThe social implications relate to (1) further research on the associations between the effects of external policy demands on teachers' work and work–life tensions, teachers' sustained commitment and quality; and (2) further research on the impact of the collective influences of national cultures, broad-based policy conditions, personal values and the demands of particular schools, parents and students that influence teachers' experience, perceptions and enactments of professionalism in order to provide further insights into understanding the complexity of teachers' lives and promoting teachers' sustained enactments of professionalism in broad contexts.Originality/valueThe research findings, though tentative, revealed that the altruistic nature of their mission to serve students and the parental community was the dominant marker of professionalism for teachers in China, regardless of school structures, cultures, academic achievement imperatives and personal circumstance; and that their professionalism was informed by the socio-cultural formation of individual and collective moral responsibility, reinforced through national educational policies. These findings differed from the concerns reported by the teachers in the Australian study, which aligned with literature that suggests that teacher professionalism is being eroded through neo-liberal government policies, excessive workloads and performance-oriented cultures. Though the comparative data set is small, these findings suggest that whilst there are increasing policy convergences across nations, which seek to define teacher professionalism through their abilities to make improvements in students' measurable academic achievement, how teachers in different countries and cultures define themselves as professionals may differ.
教师专业化:中国教师的视角
目的本研究旨在探讨中国教师工作的组织和文化背景之间的联系,这些背景对他们对专业精神的理解的影响,以及这些背景与他们感知到的有效教学意愿和承诺之间的关系。设计/方法/方法该研究是北京和悉尼两国大学合作的一部分,旨在共同制定和实施研究方案,研究澳大利亚和中国教师对其专业精神影响的看法。本文主要关注中国的研究,但也提到了澳大利亚和中国教师观点的主要差异。本研究从北京市中小学校的方便样本中招募了17名处于职业生涯早期、中期和后期阶段的教师。进行了个体访谈的定性数据分析和跨案例比较分析。对来自北京的数据的分析表明,几乎所有的教师都强调他们强烈的道德目的和尽最大努力教学的承诺,尽管他们意识到工作量、学校环境、文化和个人环境的挑战,这些都考验了他们的决心。相比之下,对教师自主性和能动性的担忧在澳大利亚的研究和其他已发表的研究文献中很常见,但在中国的数据中却不太明显。研究的局限性/启示作者承认,本研究的规模较小,数据来自中国一个城市地区的狭窄样本,由于中国沿海发达地区和大城市与偏远农村地区之间存在显着差异,因此我们应该谨慎地将研究结果推广到中国其他地区和学派。此外,采访数据只收集了一次,限制了对时间快照的了解。本研究可被视为对其他地区和国家的研究者的一种鼓励,以进一步探索社会情境下对教师专业的理解对实践的影响。未来的研究还可以受益于利用多种数据来源、纵向设计和跨文化合作,以进一步探索在参与全球视角的同时,在当地定义教师对专业精神的理解的挑战。实践意义实践意义涉及:(1)考虑到国家和地方文化背景的独特作用,通过在不同的职业背景下发展对专业主义的感知和实施的本地细微理解,扩大教师专业主义的概念;(2)设计初级教师教育和持续专业发展方案,以便考虑到对职业理想和教师个人身份的影响,考虑到诸如强制性标准等结构在工作场所的意识形态和实际相互作用,以及不同的社会经济地理环境(例如农村和城市);(3)设计领导力发展计划,考虑到学校领导者的价值观、品质和学校文化实践及其对教师福祉的影响之间的联系,以及实现他们对专业人士和最佳教学的理解的能力和能力。社会影响社会影响涉及:(1)进一步研究外部政策要求对教师工作的影响与工作-生活紧张关系、教师持续承诺和质量之间的关系;(2)进一步研究国家文化、基础广泛的政策条件、个人价值观以及特定学校、家长和学生的需求对教师的专业体验、感知和实施的集体影响,从而进一步了解教师生活的复杂性,促进教师在广泛背景下持续实施专业。研究结果虽然是初步的,但表明,无论学校结构、文化、学业成就要求和个人情况如何,为学生和家长社区服务的利他主义本质是中国教师职业精神的主要标志;他们的专业精神受到个人和集体道德责任的社会文化形成的影响,并通过国家教育政策得到加强。这些发现与澳大利亚研究中教师报告的担忧不同,该研究与文献一致,表明教师的专业精神正在被新自由主义政府政策、过度的工作量和以绩效为导向的文化所侵蚀。 虽然比较数据集很小,但这些发现表明,虽然各国的政策趋同程度越来越高,试图通过提高学生可衡量的学业成就的能力来定义教师的专业性,但不同国家和文化的教师如何将自己定义为专业人士可能会有所不同。
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来源期刊
Journal of Professional Capital and Community
Journal of Professional Capital and Community EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
9.90
自引率
10.50%
发文量
14
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