Teachers' Identities and Life Choices

dc.contributor.authorPattie Luk-Fong
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-18T22:35:53Z
dc.date.issued2013
dc.description.abstractThis book discusses issues related to teachers' identities and life choices when globalisation and localisation are enmeshed. It examines how competing cultural traditions and contexts acted as resources or/and constraints in framing teachers' identities and their negotiations in the family and the work domains according to their gender positioning, their roles in the family such as husband, wife, father, mother, brother, sister, son and daughter and roles in the school such as principal, senior teacher or regular teacher. Contrary to an essentialist approach to identity and culture, teachers' stories show that their identities and life choices were hardly free choices; but were often part and parcel of the culture and contexts in which they were embedded. Teachers' identities are found to be fluid, complex, hybrid and multifaceted. Using Hong Kong as a case study, this book provides not only traces of the continuity and changes of Confucian self and cardinal relationships but also a glimpse of how educational reform as neo-capitalist discourses in the workplace interacts with Confucian cultural traditions creating new hybrid practices (problems or possibilities or both) in the school and in the daily lives of teachers.
dc.identifier.isbn9789814021814
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-4021-81-4
dc.identifier.urihttps://rdigef.unam.mx/handle/rdigef/516
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherSpringer
dc.subjectTeachers - Training of
dc.subjectInternational education
dc.subjectComparative education
dc.subjectEthnopsychology
dc.subjectCounseling
dc.subjectSex
dc.subjectTeaching and Teacher Education
dc.subjectInternational and Comparative Education
dc.subjectCross-Cultural Psychology
dc.subjectCounseling Psychology
dc.titleTeachers' Identities and Life Choices
dc.typeBook

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