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"An imperilled profession?" : teachers' perceptions of the significance of remuneration in entering and remaining in the teaching profession.Sfetsios, Nefeli 03 March 2009 (has links)
In view of the rapid decrease in the number of students opting to train as teachers and the
increasing numbers of teachers leaving the profession; the teaching profession in South
Africa is indeed what Duke (1984) termed “imperilled”. While quantitative research
identifies remuneration to be the foremost factor attributed to the dissatisfaction of
teachers in South Africa as elsewhere; the main purpose of this study was to explore
teachers’ perceptions of remuneration. Nine qualified women teachers aged between 25
and 35 years of age, who had been teaching for at least two years and less than ten,
volunteered to take part in this study. The sample was drawn from government schools in
a suburban part of Johannesburg. This research was based on the information gathered
from a short biographical questionnaire followed by in-depth, semi-structured interviews.
A process of language sensitive thematic content analysis was employed in order to
analyse the data from the interviews. The research indicates that in the decision to enter
the teaching profession, notions of the perception that teaching is a vocation predominate.
An emphasis on the related intrinsic rewards to be gained from teaching was found to
receive greater focus than monetary concerns on entering the profession. The participants
expressed that women are more likely to enter the teaching profession while even though
men may share the passion to teach, they are seriously deterred by the poor levels of
remuneration. The participants explained that as the contexts of their lives changed, so
too did their perceptions of remuneration, often resulting in an increasing emphasis on the
importance of better remuneration to meet their and their families’ financial needs.
Related to this, it was found that as South African teachers were exposed to an almost
overwhelming number of challenges, the participants began to experience fewer intrinsic
rewards which seemed to impact negatively on their perceptions of remuneration. Thus of
the nine participants, only two indicated their long-term commitment to the teaching
profession whereas the remaining seven all had plans to leave the profession in search of
better remuneration.
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Money: a personal and private currencyWilson, Valerie Ann St. Clair January 1996 (has links)
This thesis confronts the ‘taken-for-granted’ nature of money. It explores the word ‘money’ itself, contrasting the way it is used/defined in the economics discourse with the way it has been approached in the psychological discourse. The thesis crosses disciplinary boundaries in an attempt to come closer to the everyday, personal experience of money. It unwraps the childhood history of money, showing how adult money attitudes emerge from unconscious predispositions and childhood experience. It demonstrates the importance of ‘control’ as a variable and the lifelong balancing act which takes place between spending and saving. Today, the form of money is in the process of change. It has undergone significant changes before: the nineteenth century adoption of paper money upset the bullionists as much as plastic or virtual money can unsettle traditionalists at the end of the twentieth century. Attitudes to the underlying substance 'money' remain relevant, whatever physical form the currency takes. Thus, gold and silver coins, the treasure of childhood pirate stories, may retain mental currency long after their demise as physical currency. Indeed, the more money becomes abstracted from something tangible, the more it is necessary to understand the primal nature of the underpinning attitudes that are affected.
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