This document discusses changes over the last 20 years that have impacted teachers' professional identities and autonomy. Governments have increasingly imposed accountability measures like standardized testing and curriculum standards in an effort to raise standards. This has reduced teachers' traditional classroom autonomy and shifted the focus to competency-based teaching aligned with external definitions of quality. While experienced teachers have maintained some independence, younger teachers feel pressure to comply with these new agendas. This erosion of professional autonomy and increased workload from reforms has implications for teachers' motivation, commitment and effectiveness.
This document discusses changes over the last 20 years that have impacted teachers' professional identities and autonomy. Governments have increasingly imposed accountability measures like standardized testing and curriculum standards in an effort to raise standards. This has reduced teachers' traditional classroom autonomy and shifted the focus to competency-based teaching aligned with external definitions of quality. While experienced teachers have maintained some independence, younger teachers feel pressure to comply with these new agendas. This erosion of professional autonomy and increased workload from reforms has implications for teachers' motivation, commitment and effectiveness.
This document discusses changes over the last 20 years that have impacted teachers' professional identities and autonomy. Governments have increasingly imposed accountability measures like standardized testing and curriculum standards in an effort to raise standards. This has reduced teachers' traditional classroom autonomy and shifted the focus to competency-based teaching aligned with external definitions of quality. While experienced teachers have maintained some independence, younger teachers feel pressure to comply with these new agendas. This erosion of professional autonomy and increased workload from reforms has implications for teachers' motivation, commitment and effectiveness.
Chapter 2 School reform and transitions in teacher professionalism and identity Christopher Day* School of Education, Jubilee Campus, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NGB 1BB, UK Abstract In this paper transitions in the operational denitions of professionalism over the last 20 years will be discussed. As a consequence of (imposed) changes in the control of curriculum and assessment and increased measures of public accountability, teachers in most countries now work within cultures in which their careers are ever more dependent upon external denitions of quality, progress and achievement for their success. Although many experienced teachers have maintained their identities, nding room to manoeuvre within a general reduction in their traditional classroom autonomy, the pressure on these and younger colleagues is to comply with competency based agendas. In such cultures, attention to teachers identitiesarguably central to sustaining motivation, efcacy, commitment, job satisfaction and effectivenesshas been limited. r 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. 1. The fashioning of a new accountability agenda There are a number of key events which have changed forever the post-war environment in which teachers teach and students learn in many countries. Supported by claims of falling standards relative to those in competitor nations which are deemed to be incompatible with the need to increase economic competitiveness and social cohesion, successive governments have attempted to re- orientate the strong liberal-humanist traditions of schooling, characterised by a belief in the intrinsic, non-instrumental value of education towards a more functional view characterised by competency based, results driven teaching (Helsby, 1999, p. 16), payment by results and forms of indirect rule from the centre (Lawn, 1996). It is important to recognise that what has happened to education is one ARTICLE IN PRESS *Tel.: +44-115-9514423; fax: +44-115-9514435. E-mail address: christopher.day@nottingham.ac.uk (C. Day). 0883-0355/$ - see front matter r 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/S0883-0355(03)00065-X outcome of a larger ideological debate on the costs and management of the public services in general. In England, for example, education as a public service was the test bed for a raft of radical reforms from the mid-1970s which were born of political new right ideology and economic pragmatism and which challenged the post- Second World War monopoly which professionals in education, health, and the social services had held. For education, as for all the public services, what we are witnessing still: yis a struggle among different stakeholders over the denition of teacher professionalism and professionality for the twenty rst centuryy(Whitty, Power, & Halpin, 1998, p. 65). As part of this, new limits have been placed on teachers autonomy. Policies of decentralisation of the management of budgets, plant, stafng, student access and curriculum and assessment (Bullock & Thomas, 1997) have been accompanied by centrally determined and monitored measures of pupil achievement. These have had the effect of restricting the conditions under which teachers work, putting into place a system which rewards those who successfully comply with government directives and who reach government targets and punishes those who do not. In the USA, for example, a high stakes testing regime has been established in order to ensure that schools engage in a State determined improvement agenda for all students to meet a prescribed level of achievement on State authorized tests. The message is clear: improve or be taken over or closed down. In a recent wide ranging evaluation over three years of the effects of such high-stakes testing on high schools in Texas and Kentucky, New York and Vermont, Siskin and her colleagues (Siskin, 2003) found that although they have provided for a new tightening up of the curriculum in certain areas and a new sense of purpose in teaching, the net effects have been the massive growth of expensive measures of testing and curriculum validation of traditional core subjects at the expense of those which are not. Whilst teachers and teacher unions have welcomed the introduction and development of new standards for curriculum and teaching they are reported to have been dismayed by the quality and applicability of the new tests which form the basis for judging the value of their work. Moreover, the high stakes testing measures do not yet appear to have contributed to improvements in pupil achievements. Indeed, many more students in urban and high poverty districts will be denied qualication as high- school graduates (Carnoy, Elmore, & Siskin, 2003). Teachers in most countries across the world are experiencing similar government interventions in the form of national curricula, national tests, criteria for measuring the quality of schools and the publication of these on the internet in order to raise standards and promote more parental choice. Although school contexts continue to mediate the short term effects of the intensication of work which is a consequence of such reforms (Apple, 1986), the persisting effect is to erode teachers autonomy and challenge teachers individual and collective professional and personal identities. Furthermore, reforms of this kind are being reinforced by changes in pre-service teacher training through which students now must meet the measurable require- ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 678 ments of prescribed curricula and sets of narrowly conceived, instrumentally oriented competencies in order to succeed. Although reforms in schools are different in every country in their content, direction and pace, they have ve common factors. (1) They are proposed because governments believe that by intervening to change the conditions under which students learn, they can accelerate improvements, raise standards of achievement and somehow increase economic competitiveness. (2) They address implicit worries of governments concerning a perceived fragmentation of personal and social values in society. (3) They challenge teachers existing practices, resulting in periods of at least temporary destabilisation. (4) They result in an increased work load for teachers; and (5) they do not always pay attention to teachers identitiesarguably central to motivation efcacy, commitment, job satisfaction and effectiveness. Prior to this new work order, a compact had existed between government, parents and schools in which, by and large, teachers were trusted to do a good job with minimum direct intervention by government into matters of school governance, the school curriculum, teaching and learning and assessment. In England and Wales, for example, quality assurance (a term not yet invented in the 70s) was provided by Her Majestys Inspectors (HMI), a relatively benign group of ex-teachers and lecturers who had become civil servants and who were charged with monitoring and maintaining standards through their connoisseurship judgements on quality (this was also the case in many other West European countries). Local Education Authorities (the equivalent of School Districts) were still responsible for curriculum and professional support and employed either School Advisers or School Inspectorsconsisting, like HMI, of ex-heads and senior teaching staffto achieve this and monitor schools. Apart from a minimalist core curriculum, LEAs and schools were able to exercise considerable choice with regard to the balance of the curriculum taught (although most of secondary education conformed to a university entrance driven national examination system for students at age 16 and 18), and this was reected in different opportunities for students who lived in different LEAs. Colleges of Education, responsible for providing the bulk of new teachers, also exercised choice in their pre-service work, as did Universities in their post-graduate one-year courses. Signicantly, continuing professional development (C.P.D.) opportunities were largely left to the choice of individual teachers; teacher development was a term widely used; and the curriculum in school was taught not delivered. Curriculum developments in schools were initiated and managed locally or by a national Schools Council, funded by government but governed by a partnership between teachers professional associations and government. Value added, accountability, training, performativity and performance management were not yet even twinkles in the eyes of the policy makers. The nations primary (elementary) schools were the envy of the world and headteachers were the power in their own kingdoms, free to govern as they wished. The new public management (Clarke & Newman, 1997, p. ix) illustrated in the discussion so far, has been identied in which schools are opened to market pressures through parental choice, given greater nancial autonomy and expected to improve on a yearly basis in terms of both teacher and pupil performance through ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 679 independent external inspection, pupil testing, annual performance management reviews of individual teachers and associated annual school development plans and target setting. In some countries league tables of results have been introduced and made public; parents are encouraged to choose the school to which they send their children; school governors (lay people) have been given more authority as schools have become locally managed and centrally accountable. To ensure that schools comply with these innovations, regular school inspections have become more prescriptive (for instance, in England HMI became OFSTED, The Ofce for Standards in Education) with judgements based upon a national assessment framework. In England, there has been the naming and shaming of schools which are categorised as being in need of special measures. Some schools have been closed. Successful schools have been awarded Specialist, Lighthouse or Beacon status and given more resources. And for schools with a negative evaluation, follow- up procedures have been installed, putting more pressure upon the teachers. Among the negative consequences of these (and other) centrally imposed initiatives have been an increase in teachers work time, low morale, and a continuing crisis in teacher recruitment and retention, especially in those schools which are in challenging socio-economic contexts. Alongside (though not necessarily associated with) these, has been a rise in dissatisfaction of their school experiences by a signicant number of pupils, expressed in increases in absenteeism, behavioural problems in classrooms and in the less easily measurable but well documented alienation from formal learning of many who remain. Ball (2001) has described this central drive for quality and improvement as being embedded in three technolo- giesthe market, managerialism and performativity (Lyotard, 1979)and placed them in distinct contrast to the post-war public Welfarist State. 2. Discourses of professionalism Professionalism has been the subject of many studies over the last century. Adopting a macro-perspective, Hargreaves has presented the development of professionalism as passing through four historical ages in many countriesthe pre- professional (managerially demanding but technically simple in terms of pedagogy); the autonomous (marked by a challenge to the uniform view of pedagogy, teacher individualism in and wide areas for discretionary decision taking); collegial (the building of strong collaborative cultures alongside role expansion, diffusion and intensication); and the post-professional (where teachers struggle to counter centralized curricula, testing regimes and external surveillance, and the economic imperatives of marketisation) (Hargreaves, 2000a, p. 153). Essentially, his work and that of other researchers (Helsby, 1996; Robertson, 1996; Talbert & McLaughlin, 1996) illustrates the growth of challenges from governments to teachers agency, and a contestation of control of curriculum content, pedagogy and assessment historically associated with teacher professionalism. From a different perspective, researchers have situated teachers within, for example, debates about restricted and extended (Hoyle, 1974), referring to the extent to which they engage in learning; ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 680 and proletarianisation, intensication and bureaucratisation (Ozga, 1995; Campbell & Neill, 1994; Helsby, 1996, 1999), referring to the extent to which teachers work has been affected by external prescriptive policy interventions which result in less control; or autonomy of classroom decision making, a diminished sense of agency (Gilroy & Day, 1993). Reforms have changed what it means to be a teacher as the locus of control has shifted from the individual to the system managers and contract has replaced covenant (Bernstein, 1996). Yet, being a professional is still seen as an expectation placed upon teachers which distinguishes them from other groups of workers. Professionalism in this sense has been associated with having a strong technical culture (knowledge base); service ethic (commitment to serving clients needs); professional commitment (strong individual and collective identities); and profes- sional autonomy (control over classroom practice) (Etzioni, 1969; Larson, 1977; Talbert & McLaughlin, 1996). The emphasis on corporate management which many reforms produce has, however, resulted in a sea change in the nature of professionalism. Each teacher must now be a: yprofessional who clearly meets corporate goals, set elsewhere, manages a range of students well and documents their achievements and problems for public accountability purposes. The criteria of the successful professional in this corporate model is one who works efciently and effectively in meeting the standardised criteria set for the accomplishment of both students and teachers, as well as contributing to the schools formal accountability processes (Brennan, 1996, p. 22). Sachs (2003) identies two contrasting forms of professional identity: (1) Entrepreneurial, which she identies with efcient, responsible, accountable teachers who demonstrate compliance to externally imposed policy imperatives with consistently high quality teaching as measured by externally set performance indicators. This identity may be characterised as being individualistic, competitive, controlling and regulative, externally dened and standards-led: and (2) Activist, which she sees as driven by a belief in the importance of mobilising teachers in the best interests of student learning and improving the conditions in which this can occur. In this identity, teachers will be primarily concerned with creating and putting into place standards and processes which give students democratic experiences. The former, she argues, is the desired product of the performativity, managerialist agendas while the latter suggests inquiry oriented, collaborative classrooms and schools in which teaching is related to broad societal ideals and values and in which the purposes of teaching and learning transcend the narrow instrumentalism of current reform agendas. As a result of analysis and critiquing of different discourses of professionalism and professionalisation in a post-modern age, Hargreaves and Goodson propose seven principles which provide an alternative to current reform agendas: (1) Increased opportunity and responsibility to exercise discretionary judgement over the issues of teaching, curriculum and care that affect ones students. (2) Opportunities and expectations to engage with the moral and social purposes and value of what teachers ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 681 teach, along with major curriculum and assessment matters in which these purposes are embedded. (3) Commitment to working with colleagues in collaborative cultures of help and support as a way of using shared expertise to solve ongoing problems of professional practice, rather than engaging in joint work as a motivational device to implement the external mandates of others. (4) Occupational heteronomy rather than self-protective autonomy, where teachers work authoritatively yet openly and collaboratively with other partners in the wider community (especially parents and students themselves), who have a signicant stake in students learning. (5) A commitment to active care and not just anodyne service for students. Professionalism must in this sense acknowledge and embrace the emotional as well as the cognitive dimensions of teaching, and also recognise the skills and dispositions that are essential to committed and effective caring. (6) A self-directed search and struggle for continuous learning related to ones own expertise and standards of practice, rather than compliance with the enervating obligations of endless change demanded by others (often under the guise of continuing learning or improvement). (7) The creation and recognition of high task complexity with levels of status and reward appropriate to such complexity (Hargreaves & Goodson, 1996, pp. 2021). Professionals themselves, from these perspectives, are said to have various, core moral purposes and ethical codes (Hansen, 1995; Day, 2000a, b; Jackson, Boostrom, & Hansen, 1993; Pels, 1999), pursuing teaching as an art, craft (technical) and scientic endeavour (Friedson, 2001; Galton, Hargreaves, & Wall, 1999; Brown & McIntyre, 1992). Such higher moral purposes of teachers (Sockett, 1993) are under threat by teaching and learning agendas which focus upon improving schools and raising student achievement within a restricted, measurable range of subjects, abilities or competencies. Teachers broader identities, central to the exercise of the kinds of professionalism described above, are being challenged. This new age has been called post-professionalism (Ball, 2003), since teachers and other public services workers succeed only by satisfying and complying with others denitions of their work. The ethical-professional identities that were dominant in schools are being replaced by entrepreneurial-competitive identities. 3. Professional and personal identities ythe self is a crucial element in the way teachers themselves construe the nature of the job. (Kelchtermans & Vandenberghe, 1994, p. 47). Much research literature demonstrates that events and experiences in the personal lives of teachers are intimately linked to the performance of their professional roles (Ball & Goodson, 1985; Hargreaves & Goodson, 1996). In her research on the realities of teachers work, Acker (1999) describes the considerable pressures on teaching staff, not just arising in their work but also from their personal lives. Complications in personal lives can become bound up with problems at work. Woods, Jeffey, Troman, and Boyle (1997, p. 152) argue that teaching is a matter of values. People teach because they believe in something. They have an image of the good society. Kelchtermans (1993) suggests that the professional self, like the ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 682 personal self, evolves over time and that it consists of ve interrelated parts: Self- image: how teachers describe themselves though their career stories; Self-esteem: the evolution of self as a teacher, how good or otherwise as dened by self or others; Job- motivation: what makes teachers choose, remain committed to or leave the job; Task perception: how teachers dene their jobs; Future perspective: teachers expectations for the future development of their jobs (Kelchtermans, 1993, pp. 449450). So teachers identities are closely bound with their professional and personal values and aspirations. Where teachers are opposed to the values embodied in imposed change it is difcult for them to adjust to new roles and work patterns (Woods et al., 1997). Osborn, Abbot, Broadfoot, Croll, and Pollard (1996), in a large scale study of English primary schooling, found that over the eight years of the study, while some tensions were experienced in adapting to the new values in the reforms, the main response of the teachers was one of incorporation of the changes. However, Helsby (1999) in a study of secondary schools, and Menter, Muschamp, Nicolls, Ozga, and Pollard (1997) in a primary school study, found that, at least temporarily, many teachers professional identities, in which their values were embedded, were undermined by the reforms. Teachers sense of professional, personal identity is a key variable in their motivation, job fullment, commitment and self-efcacy; and these will themselves be affected by the extent to which teachers own needs for autonomy, competence and relatedness are met. Reforms have an impact upon teachers identities and because these are both cognitive and emotional, create reactions which are both rational and non rational. Thus, the ways and extent to which reforms are received, adopted, adapted and sustained or not sustained will be inuenced by the extent to which they challenge existing identities. Several researchers (Nias, 1989, 1996; Nias, Southworth, & Campbell, 1992; Hargreaves, 1994; Sumsion, 2002) have noted that teacher identities are not only constructed from the more technical aspects of teaching (i.e. classroom management, subject knowledge and pupil test results) but, also as van den Berg (2002) explains: ycan be conceptualised as the result of an interaction between the personal experiences of teachers and the social, cultural, and institutional environment in which they function on a daily basis (p. 579). Reporting on research with teachers in The Netherlands, Beijaard (1995) illustrated the different patterns of change in teacher identities: Mary remembers her satisfaction about her own teaching in the beginning because she experienced it as a challenge. This challenge disappeared when she had to teach many subjects to overcrowded classes. The second lowest point in her storyline was caused by her time-consuming study and private circumstances at home. Now she is reasonably satised, due to a pupil centred method she has developed together with some of her colleagues. Peter is currently very satised about his own teaching; he qualies his present teaching style as very adequate. In the beginning of his career, however, it was very problematic for him to maintain order. In this period he considered leaving the profession several times. The second lowest point in his story line refers to private circumstances and to problems in the relationship with colleagues (p. 288). ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 683 Here we see the ways in which personal and professional environments affect teachers identities both positively and negatively. This interplay between the private and public, the personal and professional lives of teachers is a key factor in their sense of identity and job satisfaction and, by inference, in their capacity to maintain their effectiveness as teachers. In Marys case, increases in class size and role diversication and intensication decreased the keen challenge she had felt on her entry into teaching; in the case of Peter painful beginnings (Huberman, 1995) had made it difcult even to survive. Common to both were the times when personal problems in their lives outside the classroom affected adversely their attitudes to teaching. The architecture of teachers professional selves, in other words, is not stable, but discontinuous, fragmented, and subject to change (Day & Hadeld, 1996). This is not to say that teachers do not themselves in different ways seek and nd their own sense of stability within what appears from the outside to be fragmentary identities. On the contrary, much empirical research indicates that many nd meaning in their work through a strong sense of moral purpose. Stronach, Corbin, McNamara, Stark, and Warnes (2002) research with nurses and teachers, like others before it (Nias, 1989; Kelchtermans, 1993; Hoyle & John, 1995; Bowe, Ball, & Gold, 1992; Furlong, Barton, Miles, Whiting, & Whitty, 2000; Friedson, 2001; Hanlon, 1998), claims that professionalism is bound up in the discursive dynamics of professionals attempting to address or redress the dilemmas of the job within particular cultures (p. 109). Their reading of the professional, as mobilizing a complex of occasional identities in response to shifting contexts (p. 117), and their own data from teachers in six primary schools in England resonates with much other empirical research on teachers plurality of roles (Sachs, 2003) within work contexts which are characterized by fragmentation and discontinuities (Huberman, 1995) and a number of tensions and dilemmas (Day, Harris, Hadeld, Tolley, & Beresford, 2000) within what is generally agreed to be a hostile external audit policy culture (Power, 1994); and it does add to the considerable body of existing literature which highlights the complexities and instabilities of teachers professional lives, which points to teachers continuing sense of agency in their work and which recognizes that, excellence can only be motivated, it cannot be coerced (p. 132). Yet one omission is the discussion of the teachers personal identitiesall the more surprising because its presence shines through in the teachers words which are used. If we are to understand teachers professionalism, it is necessary to take account of personal and professional teacher identities, the importance to these of self-efcacy, motivation, job satisfaction and commitment and the relationship between these and effectiveness. There is an unavoidable interrelationship between professional and personal, cognitive and emotional identities if only because the overwhelming evidence is that teaching demands signicant personal investment of these: The ways in which teachers form their professional identities are inuenced by both how they feel about themselves and how they feel about their students. This professional identity helps them to position or situate themselves in relation to their students and to make appropriate and effective adjustments in their practice ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 684 and their beliefs about and engagement with, students (James-Wilson, 2001, p. 29). Many writers have argued that teachers derive their job satisfaction from the psychic rewards of teaching (Lortie, 1975; Rosenholtz, 1989; Hargreaves, 1998a, b, 2000b). Central amongst these is the development of close relation- ships and emotional understanding. Despite Riseborough (1981) arguing some time ago that teachers have to feel right in order to do their job to the best of their abilities, Hargreaves (1998b) points out that there have been few socio-politically informed analyses that put a prime emphasis on teacher emotions in the context of how teachers work is organized and how it is being reorganized through educational reform (p. 318). Yet whilst the new right managerialist agendas now acknowledge the existence of widespread teacher disenchantment and stress and its effects upon the quality of teaching and learning, there are no signs that they recognise the crucial effects on teachers emotional as well as intellectual identities. It is through our subjective emotional world that we develop our personal constructs and meanings of our outer realities and make sense of our relationships and eventually our place in the wider world. In addition, these are also clearly related to our motivation and state of attention. From a neuroscientic perspective, Le Doux (1998) argues that the emotional brain may act as an intermediary between the thinking brain and the outside world. There is an interplay between thought and feeling and feeling and memory. When feelings are ignored, they can act unnoticed and thus have unacknowledged negative or positive inuences. Our capacity to function intellectually is highly dependent on our emotional state. When we are preoccupied our minds are literally occupied with something and we have no space to pay attention, to take in and listen to anything else. When we are frightened we are more likely to make mistakes. When we feel inadequate we tend to give up rather than struggle to carry on with the task. (Salzberger-Wittenberg, 1996, p. 81) When ooded by our emotional brain, as is the case of multiple reform agendas, our working brain may have little capacity for attention to hold in mind the facts necessary for the completion of a task, the acquisition of a concept or the making of an intelligent decision. The performativity agenda, coupled with the continuing monitoring of the efciency with which teachers are expected to implement others plans for the kind of curricula and approaches to teaching, learning and assessment, has ve consequences which are likely to reduce rather than increase effectiveness. They: (1) threaten teachers sense of agency; (2) implicitly encourage teachers to comply uncritically (e.g. teach to the test); (3) challenge teachers substantive identity; ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 685 (4) reduce the time teachers have to connect with, care for and attend to the needs of individual students; (5) diminish teachers sense of motivation, efcacy and job satisfaction. It is these sources of meaning which reforms that ignore or erode core values de- stabilize, and which can destroy the sense of identity which is at the core of being an effective professional. Paradoxically, then, imposed reform may in the long term diminish teachers capacity to raise standards. 4. Two longitudinal research studies: the self and professionalism Constructing, sustaining and renewing identity, then, are essential processes when implementing school reforms: ythe maintenance of a coherent story about the self is no longer a matter of occasional xing if something goes wrong, but it is a continuing process in need of continual reskilling. This is deemed necessary in order to weather transitions that are part and parcel of everyday life (Biggs, 1999, p. 53). Two recent research studies provide empirical data about the ways in which reforms are affecting teacher identities and, therefore, their professionalism. The rst, a recently published report of a cross cultural study which investigated the impact of policy on the work of secondary school teachers in England, France and Denmark (McNess, Broadfoot, & Osborn, 2003) found that in England the perceived demand for delivery of performance had, emphasized the managerially effective in the interests of accountability while ignoring teachers deeply rooted commitment to the affective aspects of teaching and learning (McNess et al., 2003, p. 243). It drew attention to the increasing body of work which illuminates the extent to which the social and emotional aspects of teachers workthe emotional investment of selfcauses them to be vulnerable to policy changes (Nias, 1996; Acker, 1999; Hargreaves, 1994; Woods & Jeffrey, 1996) which reduce opportunities for them to exercise creativity and develop caring relationships with their pupils (Pollard, Broadfoot, Croll, Osborn, & Abbott, 1994; Woods, 1995; Woods et al., 1997; Menter et al., 1997). Using Bernsteins pedagogic models (Bernstein, 1996, pp. 5763), the authors argued that curriculum pedagogy and assessment had moved from weak to strong classication through the imposition of a highly prescriptive national curriculum (Bernstein, 1996, p. 247) which had devalued the professional pedagogic skills of the teacher (Bernstein, 1996, p. 248). This had undermined the joint negotiation and close personal relationships between the teacher and pupil in which teachers sense of personal identity in all countries is so bound up. In Denmark, though reforms are different, the relatively loose national curriculum framework has meant more preparation time for differentiated work with a perceived effect on social cohesion and cooperative working (Bernstein, 1996, p. 253) and the recent availability of childrens test results on the internet indicates further movement towards a performativity agenda. In terms of teacher ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 686 professionalism (in England), as in these countries, the research suggests that the role of teachers as knowledge constructors has been eroded, that autonomy in classroom decision making has been constrained, that their roles have become more instrumental and that their worth is judged principally on their success in complying to central agendas. In Norway, too, there is now national testing, national measures for judging the quality of schools, and increased competition between schools as privately nanced schools are encouraged (Welle-Strand & Tjeldvoll, 2002). Similar changes have been reported in Finland (Rinne, Kivirauma, & Simola, 2002) and Sweden (Lundahl, 2002). In short, ownership of the three key components of professionalism identied by Furlong et al. (2000, p. 4)knowledge, autonomy and responsibilityis being contested. These ndings mirror those emerging from the VITAE project (a four-year on- going study of variations in teachers work and lives and their effects on pupils). This project conducted a survey with 1400 teachers and is working with 300 teachers at different phases of their careers in 100 primary and secondary schools in England. Fewer than half the sample reported that their motivation was high, and one-in-ve secondary teachers reported low motivation. The level of motivation varied with years of experience. It was highest in the early years of teaching and then it declined, particularly in those with more that 16 years of experience. For around half only, motivation had increased over the past 3 years. For the others, it had declined. Half the teachers reported high levels of stress, and nearly two-thirds of teachers in one disadvantaged LEA reported that they were consistently and frequently affected in their work by stress. The majority of teachers also perceived both a loss in time to respond to the needs of individual pupils and to teach creatively (Day, Stobart, Kington, Sammons, & Last, 2003). In the rst round of interviews, questions were asked about the effects of policy, practice, pupils and personal biography. Analysis of these showed that the overwhelming number of responses centred upon the self in particular the effects of reforms on: (1) motivation and commitment; (2) beliefs, ideologies and personal and professional values; and (3) efcacy and job satisfaction. It was clear that these were core elements of the teachers professional identities. When asked what helped them to be an effective teacher, the respondents pointed to these core elements and to the emotional support of school cultures, individual colleagues, social relationships in the staffroom, a sense of being valued and that they were making a difference in pupils livesa sense of agency. Many spoke of reforms as undermining their professionalism. They put you into a straightjacket, gave less time for creativity, take time away from teaching to kids needs, de-skill, make it impossible to follow up interests of pupils. There was too much lling in paper at the expense of teaching. As one of the teachers explained it: Thats why people dont enjoy teaching so much because there isnt that opportunity to put something of yourself into your classroom. Further issues arose from the survey and interviews which must be taken into account in discussing changes in professionalism. First, there were differences between those teachers (the majority) who had entered teaching before the reforms and those who had entered during them (the latter were more positive about their impact). Whilst more experienced teachers were critical of the erosion of ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 687 opportunities to exercise their moral purposes and contribute as educators to the education of the whole student, younger teachers seemed to be more content to exercise their pedagogical skills within what was perceived by their older colleagues as the narrower range of discretionary decision-making which was a consequence of the reforms. In short, two different kinds of professional identity can now be distinguished in the reform landscape: one is located in a broader vision for professional identity which includes some responsibilities for care of the cognitive, affective, social and societal parts of the education of students by professionals who exercise broad moral purposes in their work; and the other focuses primarily upon teachers whose success is measured primarily through their ability to educate students to pass tests. This suggests that there may be an evolving transition in teacher professionalism towards the more instrumental and technical. It is clear, also, that the strength of the effects of reform upon identity are mediated not only by the nature of the reform itself but also by teachers personal sense of vocationalism and the leadership, cultures, and pupil populations of the schools in which they work. 5. Conclusion If the quality of the education provided to students is to be maintained or improved in the face of the increasing pressures and demands from a variety of stakeholders, teachers must be assisted in sustaining their enthusiasm for, and identication with their work which demands considerable investment of their cognitive and emotional selves (Day, 2000a, b; Louis, 1998). Teacher commitment has been found to be a critical predictor of teachers work performance, absenteeism, retention, burnout and turnover, as well as having an important inuence on students motivation, achievement, attitudes towards learning and being at school (Firestone, 1996; Graham, 1996; Louis, 1998; Tsui & Cheng, 1999). As a consequence of the new monitoring, inspection and public accountability systems, in addition to the increased intensication of work through added bureaucratic tasks directly associated with the performativity agenda, reforms have promoted high degrees of uncertainty, instability and vulnerability for teachers (Ball, 2001, p. 7). Kelchtermans (1996) study of the career stories of ten experienced primary school teachers revealed two recurring themes: stability in the job: a need to maintain the status quo, having achieved ambition, led to satisfaction; and vulnerability to the judgements of colleagues, the headteacher and those outside the school gates, e.g. parents, inspectors, media reports which might be based exclusively on measurable student achievements. As vulnerability increased, so they tended towards passivity and conservatism in teaching. Surprisingly, however, the relationship between external reform, teachers commitment, identity, the environments in which they work and the quality and effectiveness of their work is absent from the policies of those who believe that it is possible to steer the daily activities in the classroom from the centre. Nor has it been the subject of extensive research. The implications for those wishing to change how teachers construe, construct and conduct their work are clear. Individuals commitment to such change is essential. ARTICLE IN PRESS C. Day / Int. J. Educ. Res. 37 (2002) 677692 688 Changing operational denitions of professionalism require working closely with teachers and their individual emotional and intellectual identities because unless these are addressed reform is unlikely to succeed in the longer term. This suggests rebuilding professionalism through sustained, critical dialogue, mutual trust and respect. In a multidisciplinary review of the theoretical and empirical literature on trust spanning four decades, Tschannen-Moran and Hoy (2000) highlight the need to pay attention to trust, particularly in terms of change. They found that trust is: * a means of reducing uncertainty in situations of independence; * necessary for effective cooperation and communication; * the foundation for cohesive and productive relationships; * a lubricant greasing the way for efcient operations when people have condence in other peoples work and deeds (p. 549); * a means of reducing the complexities of transactions and exchanges more quickly and economically than other means of managing organisational life. Conversely, distrust, provokes feelings of anxiety and insecurityyself-protection yminimising (of) vulnerability ywithholding information andypretence or even deception to protect their interests (Tschannen-Moran & Hoy, 2000, p. 550). Identity, so important in the lives of teachers, is not, then, something which is xed or static. It is an amalgam of personal biography, culture, social inuence and institutional values which may change according to role and circumstance. It is often, less stable, less convergent and less coherent than is often implied in the research literature (MacLure, 1993, p. 320). Yet sustaining a positive sense of identity to subject, relationships and roles is important to maintaining motivation, self-esteem or self efcacy, job satisfaction, and commitment to teaching; and although research shows consistently that identity is affected, positively and negatively, by classroom experiences, organisational culture and situation specic events which may threaten existing norms and practices (Nias, 1989; Kelchtermans, 1993; Flores, 2002), successive reform implementation strategies have failed to address its key role in effective teaching. 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