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The work lives of teachers in England and Tasmania: Australia. A cross-cultural study of early years and primary level teachers

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 04:33 authored by Yost, H, John WilliamsonJohn Williamson
Teachers' work lives, including their roles, responsibilities, workloads and impact on their lives outside the school, is a topic of increasing interest and research internationally. In England, Galton and MacBeath (2008), reported that irrespective of country, "governance (central vs federal), [or] schooling (primary vs secondary)" teacher stress and workload appear to share a number of "common features" (p.93). In Tasmania, the island state of Australia, Gardner and Williamson (2004) investigated the work lives of primary teachers, and more recently Yost (2010) examined early childhood teachers' perceptions of teaching in contemporary Tasmanian (Australia) classrooms. The data sets from each study (i.e., Galton, MacBeath, Page, & Steward, 2002; Gardner & Williamson, 2004; Yost, 2010) reveal similarities, common trends and themes. This paper, first, will briefly describe the English and Tasmanian study contexts and the research methodology; second, present key findings identifiable within England and Tasmania's data sets and, finally, point to possible changes that may assist to alleviate some of the teachers' reported concerns. © Common Ground, Helen Yost, John Williamson.

History

Publication title

The International Journal of Learning

Volume

17

Issue

8

Pagination

331-344

ISSN

1447-9494

Department/School

Faculty of Education

Publisher

Common Ground Publishing

Place of publication

Champaign, Illinois, USA

Rights statement

Copyright 2010 Common Ground, Helen Yost, John Williamson

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Teaching and curriculum not elsewhere classified

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