Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6851130 | Teaching and Teacher Education | 2014 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
This article reports on a one year, mixed methods study of 13 teacher educators at work in English and Scottish higher education institutions. Framed by cultural-historical activity theory, itself a development of a Marxian analysis of political economy, the research shows how, under conditions of academic capitalism, these teacher educators were denied opportunities to accumulate capital (e.g. research publications, grants) and were proletarianised. The reasons for this stratification were complex but two factors were significant: first, the importance of maintaining relationships with schools in the name of 'partnership' teacher education; and, second, the historical cultures of teacher education in HE.
Related Topics
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Authors
Viv Ellis, Jane McNicholl, Allan Blake, Jim McNally,