Teachers for the international school of the future
The international school context today is characterised by rapid change, and a lack of shared terminology or agreement about when or where such schools originated. It would be safe to claim, however, that international schools had their recent origins principally in the need for globally mobile prof...
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Zusammenfassung: | The international school context today is characterised by rapid change, and
a lack of shared terminology or agreement about when or where such schools
originated. It would be safe to claim, however, that international schools had
their recent origins principally in the need for globally mobile professional
parents to arrange education for their children while located away from the
home context, and that the majority of such schools have been and continue
to be English medium. It is not surprising, therefore, that the majority of
teachers attracted to, and sought by, such schools have been native English
speakers educated themselves in an English-medium environment (Hayden
and Thompson 2008). In the absence of a shared accepted definition of the
concept of an international school it is impossible to be precise about the exact
number of such teachers. The conclusion reached by Canterford (2003),
however, based on an analysis of international school details held by Inter -
national Schools Services (ISS 2010) in 1997-8, that the teaching staff of such
schools are dominated by Americans and British, seems plausible. Equally
plausible is the anecdotal evidence suggesting that increasing numbers of native
English speakers from New Zealand, Australia, Ireland, Canada and South
Africa are now joining the teaching staff of such schools. The balance of
nationalities among international school teachers varies in different parts of
the world and may relate not only to their native language, or how far they
wish to travel from ‘home’, but also the extent to which taking a teaching
post outside one’s home country appears attractive. Joslin points out that
‘Unlike international companies where personnel are posted from headquarters
in the home country to other locations, and are given pre-departure crosscultural training and orientation programmes, teachers choose to apply for a
post overseas’ (2002: 34). Whether teachers choose to move from their home
context may be influenced by the extent of the risk such a choice will represent.
Sutcliffe, observing in 1991 that most teachers in international schools at that
time were British or American, linked this point to the fact that teachers in
the UK and USA are not civil servants. For those in countries where teachers
are classified as civil servants, he argued, reluctance to move outside the ‘home’education system may be linked to ‘the lack of freedom to move and to respond
to openings as they occur, the national career an |
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DOI: | 10.4324/9780203834800-9 |