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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dorothy Kass, Martin Sullivan
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1462625
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author Dorothy Kass
Martin Sullivan
author_facet Dorothy Kass
Martin Sullivan
Dorothy Kass
Martin Sullivan
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The New South Wales Teachers Federation, the Conciliation Committee of 1927-1929, and the Formation of the Educational Workers League Dorothy Kass Martin Sullivan Foreign Countries Teacher Attitudes Committees Negotiation Agreements Teacher Salaries Differentiated Staffs Job Satisfaction Leadership Role Public School Teachers Unions Collective Bargaining Educational History Purpose: Originally written in the 1990s but unpublished, the paper is now revised; the purpose of this paper is to examine the context of the formation of the Educational Workers League of NSW in 1931 with particular emphasis on the NSW Crown Employees (Teachers) Conciliation Committee and the enactment of its agreement in the worsening economic conditions of the Depression. The aims, reception and possible influence of the League on Federation policy and practice are addressed. Design/methodology/approach: Primary source material consulted includes the minutes of the Conciliation Committee's sittings from September 1927 to July 1929; papers relating to the Educational Workers League held in the Teachers Federation Library; and the Teachers Federation journal, "Education." Findings: The Conciliation Committee's proceedings and outcomes had far reaching implications. The resultant salary agreement received a hostile reception from assistant teachers and fuelled distrust between assistants and headmasters. As economic depression deepened, dissatisfaction with the conservative leadership and tactics of the Federation increased. One outcome was the formation of the radical, leftist Educational Workers League by teachers, including Sam Lewis, who would later play key roles within the Federation itself. Originality/value: While acknowledging the extensive earlier work of Bruce Mitchell, the paper contributes to a deeper understanding of teacher unionism and teacher activism in the 1920s and 1930s. Apart from brief attention by Federation historians in the 1960s and 1970s, there has been no history of the formation, reception and significance of the Educational Workers League.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1462625
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2020
record_format eric
spellingShingle The New South Wales Teachers Federation, the Conciliation Committee of 1927-1929, and the Formation of the Educational Workers League
Dorothy Kass
Martin Sullivan
Foreign Countries
Teacher Attitudes
Committees
Negotiation Agreements
Teacher Salaries
Differentiated Staffs
Job Satisfaction
Leadership Role
Public School Teachers
Unions
Collective Bargaining
Educational History
The New South Wales Teachers Federation, the Conciliation Committee of 1927-1929, and the Formation of the Educational Workers League Dorothy Kass Martin Sullivan Foreign Countries Teacher Attitudes Committees Negotiation Agreements Teacher Salaries Differentiated Staffs Job Satisfaction Leadership Role Public School Teachers Unions Collective Bargaining Educational History Purpose: Originally written in the 1990s but unpublished, the paper is now revised; the purpose of this paper is to examine the context of the formation of the Educational Workers League of NSW in 1931 with particular emphasis on the NSW Crown Employees (Teachers) Conciliation Committee and the enactment of its agreement in the worsening economic conditions of the Depression. The aims, reception and possible influence of the League on Federation policy and practice are addressed. Design/methodology/approach: Primary source material consulted includes the minutes of the Conciliation Committee's sittings from September 1927 to July 1929; papers relating to the Educational Workers League held in the Teachers Federation Library; and the Teachers Federation journal, "Education." Findings: The Conciliation Committee's proceedings and outcomes had far reaching implications. The resultant salary agreement received a hostile reception from assistant teachers and fuelled distrust between assistants and headmasters. As economic depression deepened, dissatisfaction with the conservative leadership and tactics of the Federation increased. One outcome was the formation of the radical, leftist Educational Workers League by teachers, including Sam Lewis, who would later play key roles within the Federation itself. Originality/value: While acknowledging the extensive earlier work of Bruce Mitchell, the paper contributes to a deeper understanding of teacher unionism and teacher activism in the 1920s and 1930s. Apart from brief attention by Federation historians in the 1960s and 1970s, there has been no history of the formation, reception and significance of the Educational Workers League.
title The New South Wales Teachers Federation, the Conciliation Committee of 1927-1929, and the Formation of the Educational Workers League
topic Foreign Countries
Teacher Attitudes
Committees
Negotiation Agreements
Teacher Salaries
Differentiated Staffs
Job Satisfaction
Leadership Role
Public School Teachers
Unions
Collective Bargaining
Educational History
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1462625