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Redefining professionalism: Romanian secondary education teachers and the private tutoring system
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles, United States;2. Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, United States;1. Graduate School of Education and Freeman-Spogli Institute, Stanford University, Fifth Floor, Encina Hall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States;2. National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE), 20 Myasnitskaya Ulitsa, Moscow 101000, Russia;1. Leibniz Institute for Science and Mathematics Education at Kiel University, Olshausenstr. 62, D-24118 Kiel, Germany;2. Faculty of Human Sciences, University of Cologne, Innere Kanalstr. 15, D-50823 Köln, Germany
Abstract:This study is an attempt to outline and to account for the professional identity and practice of the Romanian teachers since the beginning of the 1990s. An increasingly austere economy as well as profoundly altered social conditions and a number of educational reforms resulted in a marked diminution of the teacher's social and professional status. One of their principle strategies to offset this steady tendency has been to invest ever more time and effort in private tutoring. Their aim is thus to retrieve their lost authority and to counterbalance recent education policy changes. Supplementary private tutoring has grown into a parallel system of education that displays features commonly associated with the very notion of professionalism: technical culture, a commitment to service ethic, and autonomy in planning and implementing their practice. Furthermore, supplementary private tutoring helps Romanian teachers to secure advantages that are otherwise denied to them: it is rather as private tutors than as professionals that they enjoy a relatively respectable social status, economic rewards, and even political influence.
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