Organizational Influences on the Work Orientations of Elementary Teachers
- 1 May 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociology of Work and Occupations
- Vol. 4 (2), 171-208
- https://doi.org/10.1177/073088847700400203
Abstract
Existing literature on the work of the elementary school teacher tends to be based on the assumption that the organizational work context is the self-contained class room and that this situation leads to certain types of orientations with respect to the occupational task. Underlying this literature is the implicit hypothesis that other work contexts would produce different work orientations. This paper presents a means of testing this implicit hypothesis and applies it to a sample of 24 elementary schools and their teaching staffs The results do not bear out the implied assumptions and hypotheses of existing literature, suggesting that further inquiry should be carried out on more adequate samples. Toward the latter end, some of the possible sources of variation in the present data are explored as a guide to future research.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Occupational Commitment and the Teaching ProfessionPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2017
- A Method for Detecting Structure in Sociometric DataAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1970
- Stability and Change in the Communication Structure of School FacultiesEducational Administration Quarterly, 1969
- Concerns of Teachers: A Developmental ConceptualizationAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1969
- The Factorial Structure of Teacher Work ValuesAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1969
- Dimensions of Teacher Beliefs about the Teaching ProcessAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1969
- Informal Structure in Elementary SchoolsThe Elementary School Journal, 1968
- The School as a Complex Social Organization: A CONSIDERATION OF PATTERNS OF AUTONOMYHarvard Educational Review, 1964
- The Teacher in the Authority System of the Public SchoolJournal of Educational Sociology, 1953