La division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaire

Since the early 1990s, the number of new education support personnel in Quebec’s primary and secondary schools has increased considerably, complementing the teaching, administrative and professional staff (psychologists, psychoeducators, resource teachers and speech therapists). Special education ai...

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Main Author: Louis Levasseur
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Université de Provence 2014-09-01
Series:Questions Vives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/questionsvives/1513
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spelling doaj-59124cfe2a0e440aa35dba4a0cad283c2020-11-25T00:06:19ZfraUniversité de ProvenceQuestions Vives1635-40791775-433X2014-09-012110.4000/questionsvives.1513La division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaireLouis LevasseurSince the early 1990s, the number of new education support personnel in Quebec’s primary and secondary schools has increased considerably, complementing the teaching, administrative and professional staff (psychologists, psychoeducators, resource teachers and speech therapists). Special education aides are among the new education support personnel; they perform tasks designed to give students educational, social and psychological support, demonstrating that the mission of the school is to socialize, as well as instruct. In schools, how do special education aides coordinate with teachers in achieving their common goal of socializing students? In many respects, as shown by our research on the sociology of educational work, the discourse of teachers and special education aides is similar with respect to student socialization, moral autonomy and the construction of the subject. However, depending on the institutional ground from which they speak, the duties they perform, the students involved and the nature of their problems, teachers and special education aides do not necessarily adhere to the same models of socialization and do not agree on whether to prioritize academic aspects or the subject's autonomy, as we will show using data drawn from our studies of models of socialization in schools.http://journals.openedition.org/questionsvives/1513division of workteacher and technical worksubjectificationschool ordersocioaffectivity
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Louis Levasseur
spellingShingle Louis Levasseur
La division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaire
Questions Vives
division of work
teacher and technical work
subjectification
school order
socioaffectivity
author_facet Louis Levasseur
author_sort Louis Levasseur
title La division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaire
title_short La division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaire
title_full La division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaire
title_fullStr La division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaire
title_full_unstemmed La division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaire
title_sort la division du travail éducatif : deux figures de la subjectivité en tension au sein de l’institution scolaire
publisher Université de Provence
series Questions Vives
issn 1635-4079
1775-433X
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Since the early 1990s, the number of new education support personnel in Quebec’s primary and secondary schools has increased considerably, complementing the teaching, administrative and professional staff (psychologists, psychoeducators, resource teachers and speech therapists). Special education aides are among the new education support personnel; they perform tasks designed to give students educational, social and psychological support, demonstrating that the mission of the school is to socialize, as well as instruct. In schools, how do special education aides coordinate with teachers in achieving their common goal of socializing students? In many respects, as shown by our research on the sociology of educational work, the discourse of teachers and special education aides is similar with respect to student socialization, moral autonomy and the construction of the subject. However, depending on the institutional ground from which they speak, the duties they perform, the students involved and the nature of their problems, teachers and special education aides do not necessarily adhere to the same models of socialization and do not agree on whether to prioritize academic aspects or the subject's autonomy, as we will show using data drawn from our studies of models of socialization in schools.
topic division of work
teacher and technical work
subjectification
school order
socioaffectivity
url http://journals.openedition.org/questionsvives/1513
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