Teacher Workload: Primary Recommendations for Improvement
By (Author) M. Scott Norton
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
12th December 2021
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
371.1412
Paperback
104
Width 154mm, Height 220mm, Spine 8mm
204g
The book opens by underscoring the importance of teacher workload in education and its history of problems related to inequality of work assignments and its effect on student learning. Other chapters give special attention to how workload has been allocated historically. Best practices regarding teacher workload assignments are detailed in relation to best student learning outcomes. How to measure teacher workload and make necessary load adjustments are set forth in various strategies and innovative programming.
Teacher Workload by M. Scott Norton, a former superintendent and professor emeritus at Arizona State University, would be a great college textbook for aspiring superintendents or an informative read for a data-driven human resources professional. The book is quite well-researched, and I enjoyed the historical look at teacher workload and the early work of education pioneers who created mathematical formulas for calculating teacher workload... Aspiring superintendents and human resource professionals will find the book fascinating as they add background and tools to their belt. * School Administrator *
Nortons research on and discussion of the workload of todays teachers addresses the most challenging issue facing teachers charged with the responsibility of educating our youth both today as well as in the years to come. His discussion of the many aspects of teacher workload give the readereducator as well as laymanincredible insight into the complexity of the daily responsibilities and workload of teachers at all levels of educationparticularly in primary, elementary and secondary schools. Specifically, the attention he gives to teacher activities, responsibilities and assignments as well as their impact on teacher selection, retention and turnover enables the reader to more clearly comprehend and understand the magnitude of teacher workload. It will prompt the reader to give more specific and direct attention to ensuring an equitable workload for all teachers. Readers who desire to ensure the best possible preparation of our youth of today to serve our citizens of tomorrow will want to read Teacher Workload. -- Larry K. Kelly, Ed.D., author, educator, international consultant
M. Scott Norton has served as a secondary school teacher of mathematics, coordinator of curriculum for the Lincoln, Nebraska School District, assistant superintendent for instruction, and superintendent of schools in Salina, Kansas, before joining the University of Nebraska as professor and Vice-Chair of the Department of Educational Administration and Supervision. Later he served as Professor and Chair of the Department of Educational Administration and Policy Studies at Arizona State University where he is currently professor emeritus.