Description
About the Author
Carol R. Rinke, a former urban teacher, is currently an Assistant Professor of science and math education at Marist College in New York.
Reviews
The quality retention of teachers, especially those who work in schools which serve high need communities, is a key challenge for policy makers worldwide who are serious about raising educational standards. Carol Rinke's readerly book provides nuanced and insightful accounts of the motivations of science teachers who stay, shift, and leave teaching in the first seven years of their careers. She highlights the importance of supportive working conditions, values-led leadership, healthy school cultures, and the complex connections and interactions between lives and work - the personal and the professional. In doing so, she re-affirms the key role of commitment in teaching which has become, for some, a temporary profession. This is a "must read" for all teacher educators, school leaders, and aspiring teachers. -- Christopher Day, professor of education, University of Nottingham
[This book] is so well crafted, is carefully written, and conveys important messages for teacher educators and those who hire, place, support, and supervise beginning teachers. The whole thing is exceptionally well done. This is essential reading for those concerned with the extraordinary turnover of novice teachers. -- David Imig, president emeritus AACTE and professor of practice, College of Education, University of Maryland, College Park
Book Information
ISBN 9781475801682
Author Carol R. Rinke
Format Paperback
Page Count 139
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Education
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Weight(grams) 240g
Dimensions(mm) 223mm * 152mm * 12mm