Lärarkulturer och professionskoder. En komparativ studie av idrottslärare i Sverige och Grekland
Sammanfattning
The present study focuses on the professional codes of physical education (PE) teachers in
Swedish and Greek compulsory schools. Professional codes can be defined as rules that
govern teachers’ constructions of discourses as to perceived working conditions and to
declared intentions with instruction. Working conditions refer both to teacher collaboration
and constitutional (curriculum), organizational (time) and physical (facilities) frames.
Instruction intentions concern lesson’s content, content transmission and grading. Bernstein
(2000) depicts codes in terms of classification, framing and forms of pedagogy. In this study,
working conditions are analyzed as external classification and external framing, while
instruction intentions are expressed through internal classification, internal framing and
visible or invisible pedagogy.
Nationwide surveys have been conducted in Sweden as well as in Greece to highlight
working conditions and intentions of instruction. The final sample consisted of 707 Swedish
PE teachers and 451 Greek PE teachers. In depth semi-structured interviews have also been
administered with eight PE teachers in each country.
Results on working conditions revealed three PE teacher cultures. In Swedish primary
schools, PE teachers have a good collaboration with other teachers and restrictions due to
issues of frame are not very problematic. In the Swedish lower secondary school, teachers
collaborate intensively with other teachers, but are limited by organizational frames. At
Greek compulsory schools, PE teachers do not collaborate often with other teachers and they
perceive severe restrictions due to physical frames.
Results on instruction intentions display four PE teacher cultures. Swedish PE teachers
uphold competence codes in primary schools and perfection codes in lower secondary
schools. Greek PE teachers promote strict performance codes in lower secondary schools and
a kind of a performance code in primary schools. A competence code stresses consensual
sports activities, democratic instruction procedures and invisible pedagogy while a perfection
code refers to autonomy, self responsibility and surveillance. A strict performance code is
characterized by differentiating sports activities, discipline and visible pedagogy. The kind of
a performance code that PE teachers use in primary schools in Greece is not combined with
visible pedagogy. The various codes can be seen in the broader context of cultural
reproduction within the Swedish and Greek educational systems.
Universitet
Göteborgs universitet/University of Gothenburg
Institution
Department of Education
Institutionen för pedagogik och didaktik
Disputation
Stora Hörsalen, Inst f pedaogik och didaktik Frölundagatan 118 Mölndal kl. 13.00
Datum för disputation
2006-06-01
Utgivare
Göteborg : Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis
Fil(er)
Datum
2006Författare
Kougioumtzis, Konstantin
Publikationstyp
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
91-7346-551-8
Serie/rapportnr.
Göteborg studies in educational sciences
239
Språk
swe