Affiliation:
1. Centre for Educational Research at St. Edmunds College, University of Cambridge
2. International Center for Educational Change, Department of Theory and Policy Studies, The Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) of the University of Toronto
3. Lynch School of Education at Boston College
Abstract
Purpose : This article focuses on the sustainability of reform through the lens of teachers’ nostalgia—the major form of memory among a demographically dominant cohort of experienced older teachers. Unwanted change evokes senses of nostalgia for these lost missions that take two forms: social and political. As teachers age, their responses to change are influenced not only by processes of degeneration (loss of commitment, energy, enthusiasm, etc.) but also by the agendas of the generation—historically situated missions formed decades ago that teachers have carried with them throughout their careers. Findings: Findings indicate that the effects of cumulative demographic and educational change and the resulting nostalgias have left teachers feeling resistant to mandated reform, insecure about their own professional capacity, disenchanted with their students, and pessimistic about their schools’ future. The results of this research have practical implications for policy makers, administrators, and classroom teachers.
Subject
Public Administration,Education
Cited by
76 articles.
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