Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
“Teaching is by common consent a profession,” begins a 1917–18 Parliamentary report on teachers' salaries. But, the report continues,
at the same time it suffers from the fact that its membership is not so strictly defined as that of law or medicine. For this as well as other reasons, historical, economic, and social, the English public has not realized its great importance to the national welfare, and have not accorded to its members the position to which their education and the importance of their work entitle them. We may however look forward to a time when admission to the profession will be limited to persons who have reached accepted standards of education and training, a result which will be of great benefit to national education.
1. British Parliamentary Papers (hereafter B. P. P.), 1917–18, XI, Report… Scales of Salary for Teachers in Elementary Schools.Google Scholar
2. The School and the Teacher, October, 1855, quoted in Asher Tropp, The School Teachers (London, 1957), p. 26.Google Scholar
3. Ibid.Google Scholar
4. Effects of the Educational Provisions of the Factories Act. King Collection, Vol. 227.Google Scholar
5. Musgrave, P. W. Society and Education in England since 1800, (London, 1968), p. 61.Google Scholar
6. Lowe, Robert during the 1862 debates on the Revised Code following the Newcastle Commission Report of 1861. Cited in Tropp, School Teachers, p. 89.Google Scholar
7. One can hardly speak properly of a system of education in England before the Education Act of 1902. Inasmuch as Parliament, by the 1860s, endeavored to deal with all elementary education at one blow, and for the sake of convenience, I refer loosely here to a system of education meaning only elementary education in general. These clearly drawn class distinctions in education in England persisted in explicit form well into the twentieth century. Indeed, they persist to a certain extent today. This subject is treated masterfully and extensively for our period by Brian Simon in his classic study Education and the Labour Movement 1870–1920 (London, 1965). On these aspects of elementary education in particular see especially pp. 112–164.Google Scholar
8. Statistical Abstract for the United Kingdom 1870–1884: p. 172; 1886–1900: p. 250.Google Scholar
9. Ibid.Google Scholar
10. Barber, Bernard “Some Problems in the Sociology of the Professions,“ Daedalus, 92, 4 (1963): 672. See also, for example, Cogan, M.L. “Toward a Definition of Profession,” Harvard Educational Review, 23 (1953): 33–50; Carr-Saunders, A.M. and Wilson, P.A. The Professions (London, 1933); Vollmer, Howard M. and Mills, Donald L. eds., Professionalization (Engle-wood Cliffs, N.J., 1966); Hall, Richard H. “Professionalization and Bureaucratization,” American Sociological Review, 33 (1968): 92–103; Goode, William J. “The Theoretical Limits of Professionalization,” in Etzioni, Amitai ed., The Semi-Professions and Their Organization (New York, 1963), pp. 266–313. This is, of course, only a partial listing of avast literature. For a summary of this literature cf. also Jackson, J.A. ed. Professions and Professionalization (Cambridge, 1970). I have not distinguished here among those who would separate ideal-types of professions from those of professionalization or professionalism. And, finally, cf. also Talcott Parsons, Essays in Sociological Theory (New York, 1954), esp. “The Professions and Social Structure,” pp. 34–49.Google Scholar
11. See especially Etzioni, Semi-Professions.Google Scholar
12. See, for example, Toren, Nina “Semi-Professionalism and Social Work: A Theoretical Perspective,“ in Etzioni, Semi-Professions, pp. 141–145. Here Toren follows Carr-Saunders in identifying “new” and “would-be” professions, as well as established and semi-professions. Her dependence upon the standard ideal-type is explicit.Google Scholar
13. See, for example, Wilensky, Harold L. “The Professionalization of Everyone?“ American Journal of Sociology, 70 (Sept. 1964): 137–158; Hall, Richard H. “Professionalization and Bureaucratization,” American Journal of Sociology; Nina Toren, “Semi-Professionalism and Social Work,” American Journal of Sociology, Lortie, Dan C. “The Balance of Control and Autonomy in Elementary School Teaching,” in Etzioni, Semi-Professions, pp. 1–53; Scott, W. Richard “Professional Employees in a Bureaucratic Structure: Social Work,” in Etzioni, Semi-Professions, pp. 82–140; Simpson, Richard L. and Harper Simpson, Ida, “Women and Bureaucracy in the Semi-Professions,” in Etzioni, Semi-Professions, pp. 196–265; Harries-Jenkins, G. “Professionals in Organizations,” in Jackson, Professions, pp. 51–108.Google Scholar
14. Chapoulie, Jean-Michel “Sur l'analyse sociologique des groupes professionels,“ Revue française de sociologie, 14 (1973): 86–114; Larson, Magali S. The Rise of Professionalism, (Berkeley, 1977). I refer here specifically to Larson's introduction, in which her critique is stated (pp. ix-xviii), but her critique has obviously informed her entire study. Other critiques of the sociology of professionalization do exist, for example, Olesen, V. and Whittaker, E.W. “Critical notes on sociological studies of professional socialization,” in Jackson, Professions, pp. 179–221; and Jackson's own introduction to the same volume, but I have found Larson and Chapoulie most useful.Google Scholar
15. Chapoulie, “Sur l'analyse sociologique:“ 92–94.Google Scholar
16. Ibid., p. 95. cf, for example, Hughes, E.C. The Sociological Eye (Chicago, 1971).Google Scholar
17. Chapoulie, “Sur l'analyse sociologique:“ 95 It is the professional model, and the acceptance and internalization of the moral rules of professional conduct which justify not only the status of the established professions in society, but of their study in sociology.Google Scholar
18. Ibid., p. 97.Google Scholar
19. Ibid., p. 96.Google Scholar
20. Chapoulie, “Sur l'analyse sociologique:“ 96 98, ff. This summary constitutes a gross simplication of Chapoulie's suggestions, but I believe I have faithfully rendered his critique of functionalism. He is, indeed, critical of the interactionists. In fact, this critique constitutes most of the rest of the article, but he is far less critical of them than of the functionalists.Google Scholar
21. Larson, The Rise of Professionalism, pp. xii–xiii.Google Scholar
22. Ibid., p. xiv.Google Scholar
23. Ibid., p. xii.Google Scholar
24. Ibid. That the cognitive elements of the professions help define them means, for Larson, that a determination of their class position will revolve around a treatment of the role of intellectuals in society. Her discussion of this, however, lies outside the realm of this paper, though it has great bearing on its general theoretical questions. We will see, however, that elementary teachers in England lacked a discrete body of generalized and systematized knowledge, and that their class position is best understood outside Mannheim's category of freischwebende intelligenz, which Larson applies to the professions.Google Scholar
25. Larson, The Rise of Professionalism, pp. xvi–xvii (emphasis Larson's).Google Scholar
26. Tropp, School Teachers, p. 14.Google Scholar
27. Ibid., pp. 16–17.Google Scholar
28. Simon, Education and the Labour Movement, p. 115.Google Scholar
29. See, for example, Tropp, School Teachers, pp. 18–19.Google Scholar
30. In 1846, 10–30 for men, 6–20 for women.Google Scholar
31. Statistical Abstract for the United Kingdom 1913, 1918–31, pp. 48–49.Google Scholar
32. Cf., for example, B. P. P. 1887, XXVIII, 738.Google Scholar
33. Tropp, School Teachers, pp. 58–98. H.M.I, will be used hereafter as the abbreviation for Her, or His Majesty's Inspectors.Google Scholar
34. B. P. P. 1917–18, XI, Report … Enquiring Into … Scales of Salary for Teachers in Elementary Schools, 449–512.Google Scholar
35. Tawney, R.H. Education, the Socialist Policy (1924), cited in Simon, Education and the Labour Movement, p. 119, 145, ff.Google Scholar
36. Tropp, School Teachers, pp. 30–31, 41. See especially Simon, Education and the Labour Movement, pp. 118–119.Google Scholar
37. Tropp, School Teachers, pp. 15, 22–23, 34–35, 147–150.Google Scholar
38. Ibid., pp. 44–54.Google Scholar
39. Ibid., pp. 108, 109 n. 6.Google Scholar
40. Ibid., p. 111.Google Scholar
41. Ibid., pp. 147–150, 150 n. 33.Google Scholar
42. Candidates for pupil-teacher needed testimony from the school manager not only on their own character, but on that of their parents. Illegitimate children could not be pupil-teachers. In the case of unsatisfactory parents, the child could become a pupil-teacher if he or she moved, but not to any public house. Every candidate had to satisfy a test of his or her religious knowledge, and girls had to provide examples of their needlework.Google Scholar
43. Larson, Cf. The Rise of Professionalism, p. xvi on the middle class nature of the professions.Google Scholar
44. I am painfully aware of the difficulties involved in assessing the relative economic position of elementary school teachers in England for this period. The significant differences between urban and rural teachers, secular and religious schools, certificated and non-certificated teachers do not appear in these tables. The only such difference which does appear is that between men and women, because it is so well documented. But I do feel that I have shown as well as possible the basic relative economic position of elementary school teachers for the period. My thanks to Steven Ruggles and Roald Euller for assistance with the tables.Google Scholar
45. B. P. P., 1897, XXVI, lxxxiii.Google Scholar
46. B. P. P., 1871, LV, Minute … Establishing a New Code of Regulations, 317.Google Scholar
47. B. P. P., LVI, Syllabus…. 231.Google Scholar
48. B. P. P., 1917–18, XI, Report…., 6.Google Scholar
49. B. P. P., 1917–18, XI, Report… Enquiring into…. Scales of Salary for Teachers in Elementary Schools, 8–9.Google Scholar
50. Ibid.Google Scholar
51. Tropp, School Teachers, p. 157, n. 46.Google Scholar
52. Ibid., p.157, n. 46; p. 158.Google Scholar
53. For treatments of the feminization of teaching in America, see for example, Rothman, Sheila M. Woman's Proper Place (New York, 1978), esp. “Defining Woman's Work: Typewriters, Salesgirls, and Teachers,” pp. 42–62; Elliot Brownlee, W. and Brownlee, Mary M. Women in the American Economy (New Haven, 1976), esp. “The Designation of Teaching as ‘Women's Work',” pp. 266–270; and Katz, Michael B. The Irony of Early School Reform (Boston, 1968), esp. pp. 56–59, 153–159.Google Scholar
54. B. P. P., 1890–91, XVII, Special Report… On the Teachers’ Registration and Organization Bill, 224.Google Scholar
55. B. P. P., 1902 LXXVIII, 6.Google Scholar
56. Simon, Education and the Labour Movement, pp. 99–112, on the development of the public schools out of the endowed grammar schools.Google Scholar
57. Tropp, School Teachers, pp. 175–177; Simon, Education and the Labour Movement, pp. 208–246.Google Scholar
58. Simon, Education and the Labour Movement, pp. 242, is actually discussing the implementation of the 1902 Act, rather than the debate leading up to it.Google Scholar
59. Ibid., pp. 224–234.1 am, for the purpose of this paper, taking an extremely narrow view of the issues involved in the Education Act of 1902.Google Scholar
60. Tropp, School Teachers, p. 179; Simon, Education and the Labour Movement, p. 238.Google Scholar
61. Quoted in Simon, Education and the Labour Movement, p. 238.Google Scholar
62. Ibid., pp. 208–246, ff., esp. pp. 238–246.Google Scholar
63. Tropp, School Teachers, pp. 195–199; B. P. P.,1902, LXVIII, 791; 1906, XC, 407; 1908, LXXXIII, 799; 1890–91, X, 287; 1890–91, XVII, 199. The abolition of the register in 1906 is really only the beginning of the continuing struggle for registration and the establishment of a Council. The events become inextricably linked with the relations between elementary and secondary teachers, but the failure of the Council and register established in 1912, which lapsed in 1949, owe more, I believe, to the nature of teaching and its position in English society. As I hope this paper shows, the inability of teachers to professionalize is deeply rooted. See also, Tropp, School Teachers, pp. 267–269. The changing professional status of elementary teachers in England after 1908 must be linked to the end of the system of pupil-teachership, and the establishment of bursarship, which did much to place entry into elementary teaching outside the financial abilities of the working class.Google Scholar