"The Working Dead": Teachers' experience of reform in the Danish public school

Nana Katrine Vaaben, Helle Bjerg

Publikation: Konferencebidrag uden forlag/tidsskriftPaper/skriftligt oplægForskningpeer review

Abstract

This paper combines interest in the ghostly in organisation with an empirical analysis of how teachers in the Danish public school have been affected by simultaneous implementation of two major reforms. In 2013 a school reform was put in place, alongside with a reform of teachers’ working hour regulations. Prior to the latter reform, the negotiations between the teachers union and the employer side broke down. The result was a lock out of the teachers and the closing of all public schools for almost one month. The government unprecedentedly put an end to the conflict by implementing the working hour regulations through Law 409. However, even if the conflict ended, it refuses to go away. As this teacher puts it: "I get really mad, when people tell me that now we have to put things behind us and move on…I can't!" Even today, 4 years later, we see how teachers resigning from their job, do so by referring to their entangled experiences of conflict and reform, which eventually have made them loose the joy of teaching (Pedersen, Böwadt, & Vaaben, 2016).
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Publikationsdato2017
StatusUdgivet - 2017
BegivenhedECER 2017: Reforming Educations and the Imperative of Constant Change: Ambivalent Roles of Policy and Educational Research - Campus Carlsberg, København, Danmark
Varighed: 22 aug. 201725 aug. 2017

Konference

KonferenceECER 2017
LokationCampus Carlsberg
Land/OmrådeDanmark
ByKøbenhavn
Periode22/08/1725/08/17

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