2005
DOI: 10.1108/09513540510599653
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Managing “challenging” teachers

Abstract: PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the ways in which elementary school principals in Israel deal with teachers who are “challenging” in their behaviour, that is those who are perceived as under‐performing. This is an important and under‐researched area of educational management.Design/methodology/approachInterviews were carried out with 40 elementary school principals, every fourth school being sampled in the northern district of Haifa. They were asked to recall a particularly difficult teacher… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 157 publications
(223 reference statements)
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“…Formidable ethical, practical and methodological barriers face researchers and practitioners who wish to explore this phenomenon. Very few comprehensive empirical studies have been carried out (Bridges 1986(Bridges , 1992Wragg et al 2000;Yariv 2004;Yariv and Coleman 2005). Several reasons are suggested: First (and most obviously): workers and their employers will do their utmost to hide shortcomings.…”
Section: Difficulties In Identifying Poor-performing Teachersmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Formidable ethical, practical and methodological barriers face researchers and practitioners who wish to explore this phenomenon. Very few comprehensive empirical studies have been carried out (Bridges 1986(Bridges , 1992Wragg et al 2000;Yariv 2004;Yariv and Coleman 2005). Several reasons are suggested: First (and most obviously): workers and their employers will do their utmost to hide shortcomings.…”
Section: Difficulties In Identifying Poor-performing Teachersmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Mather and Seifert () represent many of the themes of this paradigm, situating performance management within New Public Management, modern‐day Taylorism ‘designed to gain control over craft workers through the separation of task conception and its execution’ (p. 28). Such an approach, proceeding from a labour process theory framework (see Braverman, ), relies on gaining the consent of teachers through perpetuating the ‘propaganda’ that better teacher performance leads to better ‘service provision’ adding legitimacy ‘to the ‘weeding out’ of poor performers’, those ‘challenging’ teachers that senior leaders are often unwilling to tackle (Yariv & Coleman, ). From this perspective, rather than acting as a means of driving forward quality, it becomes a ‘millstone’ (Forrester, ), a means of surveillance and control that de‐professionalises the workforce.…”
Section: Performance Management In Schoolsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yariv and Coleman (2005) describe a case of a principal who initiated cooperation between a talented teacher and her failing colleague, first by asking them to teach the same subject matter. Then, in order not to decrease the weak teacher's confidence (who suffered severe health problems) and to create a common working system, she encouraged them to attend out-of-school courses.…”
Section: Assisting and Developing Teachers: Practical Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 99%