“…When considered together, these trends in current education policy mark an important shift in the nature and scope of teacher professionalism, and this has implications for how teachers view their work and the satisfaction they derive from it (Ford et al, 2017;Hargreaves, 2010;Holloway & Brass, 2017;Torres & Weiner, 2018). In her work in the sociology of professions, Evetts (2009Evetts ( , 2011 distinguishes between occupational and organizational professionalism, with the former denoting a professionalism characterized by partnership, collegiality, autonomy, and trust, and the latter a professionalism of bureaucratic and hierarchical control, standardization, and hyperrationality.…”