Women in Organisations 1996
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-24691-5_7
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Different careers — equal professionals: women in teaching

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…For returners, it could be posited that temporal commitments have to be met before organizational or intrinsic commitment can be a major consideration in job 'choice'. The study suggests that returners demonstrate multiple commitments, and yet post-break experiences may lead them to be trapped in a work cycle phase not of their choosing, a 'compromise phase' (Healy and Kraithman 1996). The study provides evidence of returners' intrinsic commitment to work but when this is mediated by their structured temporal commitment, such commitment may be considered by potential employers, who equate 'commitment' with long hours and continuous employment, as inadequate.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…For returners, it could be posited that temporal commitments have to be met before organizational or intrinsic commitment can be a major consideration in job 'choice'. The study suggests that returners demonstrate multiple commitments, and yet post-break experiences may lead them to be trapped in a work cycle phase not of their choosing, a 'compromise phase' (Healy and Kraithman 1996). The study provides evidence of returners' intrinsic commitment to work but when this is mediated by their structured temporal commitment, such commitment may be considered by potential employers, who equate 'commitment' with long hours and continuous employment, as inadequate.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Women's work histories may be characterized by movement in and out of the labour market following childbirth. 1 The return to work period for some women is seen as an 'interim phase' (Healy and Kraithman 1996) or as 'treading water' (Brannen and Moss 1991). The success of using the interim phase to facilitate a return to a desired final career phase will be influenced by the degree of change, labour market conditions and the particular patterns of organizational discrimination.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Educational jobs are seen as being compatible with family responsibilities, offering relatively good pay, though research into part-time educational work found that it was still considered by schools as a mark of lower aspirations (Healy & Kraithman, 1996). Jobs in education have also become more casualised, with an increasing use of short-term contract work (Healy & Kraithman, 1996). Social work is also a feminised profession, at least at lower levels of the hierarchy, and there are increased opportunities for part-time work due to such developments as care in the community (Horrell & Rubery,199 1).…”
Section: Non-manual Part-time Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Working reduced hours tends to relegate workers to a separate segment of the labour market typically lacking promotion prospects (Dale, 1987;Gallie & White, 1994). Access to top managerial positions still usually requires an uninterrupted career pattern, and the perceived demands of the workload, or consideration for preferment, often involves displaying commitment by working long hours, as is the norm in the UK generally (Buswell & Jenkins, 1994;Cartwright 2% Cooper, 1997;Healy & Kraithman, 1996). Part-time workers and job-sharers often cannot compete on such terms.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The effects on teachers' employment of educational reform following the Educational Reform Act, 1988 led to firstly, a centralisation and bureaucratisation of the teaching process via the introduction of the National Curriculum and secondly, the decentralisation and development of management through enhanced accountability via inspection, compulsory appraisal and testing, and Local Financial Management of Schools (LMS), giving schools more direct authority over budgets and staff. The simultaneous centralisation of the curriculum and the decentralisation of financial management has changed teachers' employment conditions leading to greater work intensification (Healy andKraithman 1994, Sinclair et al 1996), more stress (Healy andKraithman 1994, Travers andCooper 1996), reduction in autonomy (Grey Taylor and Healy 1996, Sinclair et al 1996, increased class sizes (Healy andKraithman 1994, STRB 1994), and greater insecurity (Healy andKraithman 1994, Sinclair et al 1996). The reforms per se are not the focussed of this paper, but they form the structural and historical context for understanding the responses teacher trade unionists give when asked about union involvement in career development.…”
Section: Identifying the Themes The Educational Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%