‘Tugging at our sleeves’: understanding experiences of obligation in teaching

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Abstract

Classrooms are complex spaces. These complexities magnify the teacher’s sense of obligation to children and the subsequent experiences of being overwhelmed, which can influence the teacher’s decision to leave the profession. Yet, we believe that a teacher’s obligation to children is inherent to morally defensible teaching. Drawn from a larger research project, we explore one teacher’s experience of obligation as a promissory relation between the teacher and the child, and consider the effect this has on the teacher’s relationships with other professionals and her disengagement from the profession. In doing so, we will illustrate the teacher’s experiences of obligation; the ways these are complicated within the matrix of relationships with professional colleagues; and the possibilities for professional disengagement to be considered an act of moral resistance.

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Janzen, M. D., & Phelan, A. M. (2019). ‘Tugging at our sleeves’: understanding experiences of obligation in teaching. Teaching Education, 30(1), 16–30. https://doi.org/10.1080/10476210.2017.1420157

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