1st Edition

Role Conflict and the Teacher (RLE Edu N)

By Gerald Grace Copyright 1972
    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    Gerald Grace here explores the concept of role conflict and the current theorizing about the problems of the teacher’s role. He investigates four potential problem areas – role diffuseness, role vulnerability, role commitment versus career orientation, and value conflict – in a sample of one hundred and fifty secondary school teachers in a Midland town. The analysis shows how a teacher’s commitment to a particular set of values exposes him or her to conflict in an achievement-oriented and pluralistic society. These conflicts, present in all schools, are seen in their clearest form among secondary modern school teachers. The author suggests that colleges of education, in emphasizing commitment and in assuming value consensus, predispose their students to conflict experiences. He indicates that internal career possibilities in schools and the influence of graduate or certified status are also important factors in conflict exposure. While accepting that certain role conflicts are important in the genesis of change, the author proposes that levels of dysfunctional conflict can be reduced by the action of head teachers, by structural change in the schools and innovations in teaching education.

    Preface. Introduction 1. Approaches to the study of role conflict 2. The teacher and role conflict 3. Present perspectives 4. Perceptions and experiences 5. Diffuseness and conflict 6. Vulnerability and conflict 7. Commitment and conflict 8. Values and conflict 9. The head teachers 10. Conclusions and implications. Appendices: I The role conflict schedules. II Teacher interviews. III a. The sample III b. The interview sub-sample – Notes. Bibliography. Indexes.

     

    Biography

    Gerald Grace