Post-compulsory education in England has increasingly been brought under state control and direction, with profound consequences for those engaged in the professional development of teachers in the sector. Teacher educators are now positioned as agents of a discourse of state control in re-shaping and re-focusing the practice of the Learning and Skills workforce. Recent research into post-compulsory teacher educators in England suggests that there is an increasing feminisation of this workforce, particularly where FE/HE partnerships are concerned. This paper uncovers the locus of power which drives the increasingly gendered division of labour and attempts to account for it by means of the intersection of structuralist and post-structuralist...
The latest statistics on teacher gender show a continuing downward trend in the participation of mal...
This research addresses the construction of gender identities within the context of Initial Teacher ...
This article examines women teachers' experiences of modernization in schools in England and Wales. ...
Recent research on post-compulsory teacher educators in England suggests that there is a high degree...
The under-representation of women in promoted posts is one particular pattern of occupational segreg...
The current coalition government in England has expressed its commitment to establishing an autonomo...
This paper proposes to examine the place of women in education today as pupils and students, and tha...
Recently in England, women have been successful in obtaining managerial responsibilities in the fie...
Doing, Undoing and Redoing: a feminist study of teachers' professional identities. The thesis draws ...
ABSTRACT The move in the United Kingdom to recruit more men into primary teaching is to tackle boys ...
This paper advances a Marxist critique to consider the way the position of women teachers in the sta...
Relying on critical feminist understandings of power, this study explores how the gendered expectati...
Attempting to encourage and retain male primary school teachers can lead to the ‘glass escalator’ ph...
The prevailing construction of primary teaching in the UK and elsewhere is that of a feminised occup...
This paper introduces the concept of the phallic teacher, a spectral figure that needs to be negotia...
The latest statistics on teacher gender show a continuing downward trend in the participation of mal...
This research addresses the construction of gender identities within the context of Initial Teacher ...
This article examines women teachers' experiences of modernization in schools in England and Wales. ...
Recent research on post-compulsory teacher educators in England suggests that there is a high degree...
The under-representation of women in promoted posts is one particular pattern of occupational segreg...
The current coalition government in England has expressed its commitment to establishing an autonomo...
This paper proposes to examine the place of women in education today as pupils and students, and tha...
Recently in England, women have been successful in obtaining managerial responsibilities in the fie...
Doing, Undoing and Redoing: a feminist study of teachers' professional identities. The thesis draws ...
ABSTRACT The move in the United Kingdom to recruit more men into primary teaching is to tackle boys ...
This paper advances a Marxist critique to consider the way the position of women teachers in the sta...
Relying on critical feminist understandings of power, this study explores how the gendered expectati...
Attempting to encourage and retain male primary school teachers can lead to the ‘glass escalator’ ph...
The prevailing construction of primary teaching in the UK and elsewhere is that of a feminised occup...
This paper introduces the concept of the phallic teacher, a spectral figure that needs to be negotia...
The latest statistics on teacher gender show a continuing downward trend in the participation of mal...
This research addresses the construction of gender identities within the context of Initial Teacher ...
This article examines women teachers' experiences of modernization in schools in England and Wales. ...