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Understanding Excessive Teacher and Faculty Entitlement -

Understanding Excessive Teacher and Faculty Entitlement

Digging at the Roots

Tara Ratnam, Cheryl J. Craig (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
320 Seiten
2021
Emerald Publishing Limited (Verlag)
978-1-80043-941-2 (ISBN)
CHF 157,10 inkl. MwSt
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Understanding Excessive Teacher and Faculty Entitlement develops a body of professional knowledge by providing a deeper understanding of what manifests itself as 'excessive entitlement', by presenting a theoretical framework within which one can investigate issues and helps those concerned with education and teacher education.
Literature on academic entitlement is almost always associated with students with little examination of entitlement with reference to educators. Feelings of entitlement among educators make them hold onto rigid 'inherited scripts' and constrain the development of flexibility required in this global and technologically disruptive era. It is imperative that we understand how entitled behaviours are triggered in the discursive context of teachers' practice.


Understanding Excessive Teacher and Faculty Entitlement develops a significant body of professional knowledge by providing a deeper and sympathetic understanding of what manifests itself as 'excessive entitlement'. The volume presents a theoretical framework within which one can investigate and articulate issues and helps those concerned with education and teacher education internationally to get a sense of the complexities surrounding teachers' work.


Bringing together researchers from diverse geographical contexts, this timely book primarily addresses educators and researchers with a spin-off to human resource management in diverse organizational settings.

Tara Ratnam is an independent teacher educator and researcher from India. Her work is driven by two interrelated purposes: a) to create space for diverse students to participate as full members of the classroom and learn with dignity, and b) to support teachers to recognize voices of diversity as a form of competence in promoting learning in the classroom community. Cheryl J. Craig is a Professor and the Houston Endowment Endowed Chair of Urban Education at Texas A&M University, USA. Her research agenda has to do with what teachers come to know, do and be in context. She is an American Education Research Association (AERA) Fellow and a recipient of the Division K (Teaching and Teacher Education) Legacy Award.

Chapter 1. Introduction: The Idea of Excessive Teacher Entitlement: Breaking New Ground; Tara Ratnam and Cheryl J. Craig

Section I: Illuminating the Cultural Historical Roots of Teacher Entitlement

Chapter 2. A Literature Review of the Concept of Entitlement and the Theoretical Informants of Excessive Teacher Entitlement; Lobat Asadi and Salma Ali

Chapter 3. Exploring Teacher Entitlement: Perspectives from Personal Experience; Tom Russell

Chapter 4. Entitlement as a Promising Concept for Teacher Education Research: From Displacement to Ethical Reframing; Magdalena Kohout-Diaz and Marie-Christine Deyrich

Chapter 5. Teachers' Role and Expectations: Processes vs. Outcomes; Heidi Flavian

Section II: When Entitlement Becomes a Means to Deflect

Chapter 6. The Interaction of Culture and Context in the Construction of Teachers’ Putative Entitled Attitude in the Midst of Change; Tara Ratnam

Chapter 7. The Entitled Teacher: Perpetrator or Victim?; David Kirshner and Kim Skinner

Chapter 8. Learning Difficulties: On How Knowing Everything Hinders from Learning Anything New; John Buchanan and Wendy Holland

Chapter 9. Implicit Pedagogical Entitlement in Teachers’ Profession in Iran: A Sociopolitical Discourse; Khalil Gholami and Sonia Faraji

Chapter 10. In-Service Teacher Entitlement Attitude: A Case Study From the Spanish Context; Inmaculada Hernández and Juanjo Mena

Section III: Curricular Experiences: Higher Education

Chapter 11. Back in the Middle (Again): Working in the Midst of Professors and Graduate Students; Cheryl J. Craig

Chapter 12. Faculty Entitlement: Perspectives of Novice Brazilian University Professors; Martha Prata-Linhares, Helena Amaral da Fontoura, and Maria Alzira de Almeida Pimenta

Chapter 13. In Between Wellness and Excessive Entitlement: Voices of Faculty Members; Feyza Doyran and Özge Hacıfazlıoğlu

Chapter 14. Entitlement in Academia: Multiperspectival Graduate Student Narratives; Miguel Burgess Monroy, Salma Ali, Lobat Asadi, Kim Currens, Amin Davoodi, Matthew Etchells, Eunhee Park, HyeSeung Lee, Shakibah Razmeh, and Erin Singer

Section IV: Making the Invisible Visible: Helping Educators Extricate Their Unconscious Self

Chapter 15. Was it a Case of Teacher Educator Entitlement? Revisiting Faculty Perspective on Pre-service Teachers’ Classroom Behaviours; Eunice Nyamupangedengu and Constance Khupe

Chapter 16. Inquiring into Practice and Agency; Hafdís Guðjónsdóttir

Chapter 17. The Unknown Self: Small Stories from an Online Teacher Community in China; Jing Li

Section V: Pulling it All Together

Chapter 18. Excessive Teacher/Faculty Entitlement in Review: What We Unearthed, Where to From Here; Cheryl J. Craig and Tara Ratnam

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Advances in Research on Teaching
Verlagsort Bingley
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Gewicht 579 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Allgemeines / Lexika
Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Bildungstheorie
ISBN-10 1-80043-941-5 / 1800439415
ISBN-13 978-1-80043-941-2 / 9781800439412
Zustand Neuware
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