2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.learninstruc.2008.06.002
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Motivations, perceptions, and aspirations concerning teaching as a career for different types of beginning teachers

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Cited by 484 publications
(361 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
(39 reference statements)
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“…As discussed by Brookhart & Freeman (1992), it is obvious from these statistics, that certain student populations are overrepresented which poses difficulties regarding the generalizability of findings. Many of the more recent cross-institutional studies conducted more recently in Turkey (Aksu et al 2010), the UK (See, 2004;Reid & Caudwell, 1997;Thornton et al, 2002), the Republic of Ireland (Clarke, 2009;Heinz, 2013aHeinz, , 2013bHeinz, , 2013cDrudy et al, 2005), Northern Ireland (Moran et al, 2001), Australia (Richardson & Watt, 2006;Watt & Richardson, 2008b) and China (Su et al, 2001) offer a more complete picture of the profiles and motivations of the student populations entering teacher education in these countries.…”
Section: Research Methodologies -Overview and Discussion Of Limitatiomentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As discussed by Brookhart & Freeman (1992), it is obvious from these statistics, that certain student populations are overrepresented which poses difficulties regarding the generalizability of findings. Many of the more recent cross-institutional studies conducted more recently in Turkey (Aksu et al 2010), the UK (See, 2004;Reid & Caudwell, 1997;Thornton et al, 2002), the Republic of Ireland (Clarke, 2009;Heinz, 2013aHeinz, , 2013bHeinz, , 2013cDrudy et al, 2005), Northern Ireland (Moran et al, 2001), Australia (Richardson & Watt, 2006;Watt & Richardson, 2008b) and China (Su et al, 2001) offer a more complete picture of the profiles and motivations of the student populations entering teacher education in these countries.…”
Section: Research Methodologies -Overview and Discussion Of Limitatiomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies examining the phenomenon of the career switcher into teaching have found that, while the extrinsic attractors of financial rewards and career prestige are not a high priority for late-entry teacher candidates, the special working schedules of teachers and the security of employment associated with teaching played an important role in the decisions of many respondents (Priyadharshini & Robinson-Pant, 2003, Richardson & Watt, 2005, Thornton, Bricheno & Reid, 2002, Watt & Richardson, 2008b. As reported by Richardson and Watt (2005), women and men participating in their Australian study wanted to find careers that allowed time to have a quality family life with reasonable hours and many were prepared to trade off higher salaries for security of income (Richardson & Watt, 2005).…”
Section: Student Teachers' Reasons For Choosing a Teaching Career -A mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They may not plan on having a long career as a teacher, if, for example, they become disaffected with their choice. It might be a possibility that they view the teaching profession as a 'stepping stone' to other careers, or find that teaching proves to be too demanding for them (Watt & Richardson, 2008). It may also be possible that the fact that tensions-free teachers hardly experience any tensions is related to their personality.…”
Section: Profiles Of Professional Identity Tensionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Troubled teachers may be very insecure about how they perform professionally and, as a consequence, experience many tensions. If beginning teachers have a passion for teaching, want to make a contribution to the lives of others, or view teaching as a morally good career (Watt & Richardson, 2008), they may feel pressured to succeed in their job.…”
Section: Profiles Of Professional Identity Tensionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Teaching is a profession which demands a lot from the person throughout the career (Santavirta et al, 2007) and across various cultures people who have chosen the teaching path have one thing in common -the passion to work with students (Watt & Richardson, 2008). A recent study by Guglielmi et al (2016) examined teacher engagement in different age cohorts, their results showed main difference for younger teachers compared to other groups.…”
Section: The Effect Of Age and Subjectmentioning
confidence: 99%