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VOCATIONAL IDENTITIES IN THE SECTOR OF TOURISM

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Title: VOCATIONAL IDENTITIES IN THE SECTOR OF TOURISM


1
VOCATIONAL IDENTITIES IN THE SECTOR OF TOURISM
  • VOCATIONAL IDENTITY, FLEXIBILITY AND MOBILITY IN
    THE EUROPEAN LABOUR MARKET
  • 5TH FP
  • HPSE-CT-1999-00042
  • Universitat de València
  • Ignacio Martínez, Fernando Marhuenda
  • Alicia Ros, Almudena Navas

2
VOCATIONAL IDENTITIES IN THE SECTOR OF TOURISM
  • Discourses of employees, employers, teachers and
    students
  • Different research tools
  • Search for interactions among the different
    actors
  • Some failed attempt
  • Sources for identifying a collective identitity
  • How they perceive challenges in the sector, how
    they face them, what expectations are raised

3
Tourism sector in Spain
  • Tourism is a basic sector in Spanish economy,
    providing 33,601 million Euros in 1999.
  • It is an employment-generating sector with a
    direct participation in the overall national
    employment figures of 6.2 in 1997.
  • It is a growing sector, specially in 3 to 5 star
    hotels.
  • Hotel sector in Valencian Community
  • 352.5 million euros, with 9,981 jobs (1996).
  • Recent growth in Valencia City (3 or more stars
    hotels).

4
Main challenges in tourism sector (1)
  • Adapt to changes in demand
  • Heterogeneous demand and segmentation of supply
  • More demanding, aware and selective consumer
  • Increasing need for functional flexibility of the
    workforce and organizations.
  • Address the problem of seasonality
  • Emerging changes in concentrating demand periods
  • Seasonality consequences
  • temporary and insecure secondary labour segment
  • lack of longer-term perspectives for workers
  • Excess of staff and lack of staff
  • difficulties to face fixed costs and recouping
    investment

5
Main challenges in tourism sector (2)
  • c) Overcome the business fragmentation
  • Small and medium-sized companies are predominant
    (1997 54 of hotels had less than 20 paid
    staff).
  • Growing importance of hotel chains and other
    forms of business concentration (1997 80 hotel
    chains in Spain)
  • Competitive advantages economies of scale,
    outsourcing of tasks, access to information,
    greater corporate visibility, etc.
  • d) Addres job insecurity
  • High level of temporary job, mainly affects low
    level posts (54 in VC)
  • Flexibility in personal management, according to
    demand, but without social guarantees
  • Consequences lack of career perspectives,
    difficulties entering the job and training,
    irregular work, lower quality of production
  • Low salaries and accumulation of extra working
    hours (35 of hotel workers more than 40 hours a
    week)
  • Weakness in terms of the presence of unions

6
Main challenges in tourism sector (3)
  • e) Qualifications
  • New training options in tourism official
    vocational training, occupational and continuous
    training and university degrees
  • Specialised qualification centres (Autonomous
    Community government)
  • Low level of qualification of workers and little
    encouragement for training from employers
  • Difficulties of small companies (cost, time and
    mentality)
  • Workers difficulties (lack of resources, high
    dedication hours- to work, and lack of
    perspectives)
  • Emerging changes in large hotels (their own
    training programs)

7
(No Transcript)
8
Methodology
  • Vocational identity, flexibility and mobility in
    the European labour market
  • Objective to analyse the construction of
    vocational identities in some important and
    innovating sectors in VC
  • Focus 10 hotel companies in Valencia city, (2 or
    more stars)
  • 10 focused interviews to employers
  • 31 focused interviews to employees
  • Focused interviews (open but with a guide)
  • Systematic-comprehensive analysis from
    qualitative categories (from the interviews
    discourse and theoretical contributions)
  • Definition of key factors in vocational identity
    discourses
  • Identify the discourse patterns that shape basic
    types of professional identity

9
Key factors for a mapping of professional
identity
10
The professional (1)
  • Involvement in the profession (stability/satisfact
    ion).
  • High level of job satisfaction and strong
    professional integration (vocation and. high
    performance human capital experience/training).
  • External mobility in order to develop
    professional career
  • High level of availability and polyvalence (as
    keys to professional and vocational behaviour and
    for promotion)
  • The Significance of Work.
  • Work as a vocation and part of personal
    development.
  • Creativity conceiving work as art
  • Contribution to the company common endeavour with
    ones human capital
  • Group references.
  • References to his professional group (groups,
    persons or the profession as an ideal
    construct) formal/informal links
  • Lack of corporate identification with the
    organisation

11
The professional (2)
  • 4. Personal labour capital
  • Human capital makes his identity distinctive and
    valuable to the company
  • Specialization (knowledge of the sector, new
    techniques and know-how)
  • Leadership and capacity for organisation,
    decision-making and planning
  • Attitudes Dedication, ambition, imagination and
    creativity
  • 5. Perception of the hierarchy
  • Participation in the hierarchy is linked to
    professional development (part of the
    professional corporate culture and a personal
    goal).
  • Complications management and supervision of
    human resources
  • Responsibility recognising work done, making
    demands and supervising
  • Relationships with superiors cooperation to
    ensure the success of the work

12
The professional (3)
  • 6. Sense of involvement in the product
  • Autonomywhich increases with experience-reinforce
    s the sense of being a professional
  • Challenge to his own potential
  • Perception of forming part of a whole /
    professional has his own field
  • 7. Education and training
  • Learning process in the daily practice of real
    work
  • Increasing importance is being given to training
    (far from real work)
  • Apprenticeship model of learning as a basis for
    professional practice
  • Continuous training a way for keeping up-to-date
    (young professionals)
  • Fully-fledged professionals keep up-to-date
    sharing knowledge with peers
  • Professionals in hotel chains internal courses
    on corporate dynamics

13
The technician/bureaucrat (1)
  • Involvement in the profession (stability/satisfact
    ion).
  • Stable situation and expectation to follow a
    career within the company
  • Keys for promotion technical knowledge,
    polyvalence and knowing the company and its
    culture
  • Lack of formal criteria for promotion (evaluation
    by the manager)
  • Satisfaction with the type of work and the
    experience of responsibility (but there is no
    recognition by the company)
  • The Significance of Work.
  • Work as contribution to the common endeavour that
    is the company sense of teamwork and global view
    of the work
  • Work as a medium for personal progress (step up
    the ladder) and recognition on the part of the
    company
  • Work as the practice of ones own knowledge

14
The technician/bureaucrat (2)
  • 3. Group references Community model.
  • Identification with the company community of
    interest (workers and managers)
  • Importance given to teamwork, and to the
    functional responsibility of each individual for
    the collective group
  • Deactivation of the corporate labour discourse
    and individualisation of company-worker
    communication systems
  • Existence of intense and formal socialisation
    processes
  • 4. Personal labour capital
  • Leadership skills, organisation and planning
    capacity and technical knowledge
  • Attitude of effort, responsibility and the
    capacity to take decisions
  • Global discourse relating to the tourist sector
  • 5. Perception of the hierarchy
  • Participation in the the hierarchy at
    intermediate level is the key to identity
  • Relationship of functional trust with superiors
  • Combination of paternalist and authoritarian
    leadership (tension between control and closeness
    with subordinates)

15
The technician/bureaucrat (3)
  • 6. Sense of involvement in the product
  • Forming part of the hierarchy feeling more
    involved in the production process
  • Responsibilities as accumulation of problems vs.
    opportunities
  • Sense of autonomy within the limits of the
    department vs. awareness of forming part of a
    whole at work
  • 7. Education and training
  • Specialist qualifications (strong theoretical and
    technical base)
  • Experience adapt initial basic knowledge to each
    job and each company
  • Career in the company technical knowledge and
    experience to adapt efficiently within the
    organisation
  • Continuous training increasing value, but
    difficulties in attending (time availability)
  • Priority to internal training (interest in a
    career within the company)
  • Focus on technical innovations, human resources
    management, leadership strategies and aspects of
    the organisational culture

16
The customer service worker (1)
  • Involvement in the profession (stability/satisfact
    ion).
  • Stability level of integration and
    identification with the company
  • Satisfaction with the type of tasks and
    dissatisfaction with working conditions
  • Difficult internal mobility (career moving to
    other hotels in the chain)
  • The Significance of Work.
  • Significance of work the service relationship
    with customers and their recognition of this
    service (the customers well being as objetive)
  • The face of the hotel vocation for service
    based on the corporate identity
  • Central position of his role in the common effort
    to ensure the companys success
  • Group references.
  • Community reference as the face the company
    shows to the client
  • Collective identity as workers dissolved in the
    company community (only functional team
    relationships)
  • Discourse of the internal client care of
    members of the organisation

17
The customer service worker (2)
  • 4. Personal labour capital
  • Relational skills appropriate behaviour, as the
    capacity to deal with the customer according to
    his characteristics and expectations.
  • Technical knowledge languages and computers
    (specific software and internet)
  • Attitudes Dedication and effort
  • 5. Perception of the hierarchy
  • Middle management close relations and respect
    for hierarchy
  • Good and functional for working relations
    (communication and control)
  • Direct superiors are asked for advice, rather
    than union representatives or colleagues
  • Higher levels of the hierarchy distant (contact
    is through formal channels)

18
The customer service worker (3)
  • 6. Sense of involvement in the product
  • Autonomy at work affects the identity,
    reinforcing self-confidence
  • Matters which can affect anxiety levels at work
    a lack of clear objectives, guidelines and
    criteria for action and a lack of feedback on the
    work done
  • Clear guidelines, more than supervision, creates
    a framework to the autonomy
  • 7. Education and training
  • Specific training a knowledge base in a
    systematic way with fewer errors (far from
    company realities importance of placements)
  • Experience gives security, know-how and
    knowledge of the workplace and its real needs
  • Continuous training programmes seldom used (only
    internal courses).
  • Contents languages, computers, customer service
    and organisational culture

19
The trade worker (1)
  • Involvement in the profession (stability/satisfact
    ion).
  • Assimilation of the value of work, experienced
    from the point of view of taking up a trade as
    ones own
  • Requires a minimum level of experience in that
    trade
  • Dissatisfaction because of accumulation of extra
    tasks. Demand for availability justified by an
    ethic of work and common effort
  • Personal effort and efficiency as keys to
    promotion
  • Need for organisation, planning and forecasting
    as keys to quality work
  • The Significance of Work.
  • Value of work by itself performance of ones
    functions and a job well done.
  • Discourse of interiorised obligation, from a
    work ethic perspective which acts as the key to
    motivation.
  • Value of the result as the key to satisfaction
    (efficiency and organisation)

20
The trade worker (2)
  • 3. Group references
  • Community model strong sense of belonging with a
    heavily affective tone
  • Participation in the organisational culture
    teamwork and common effort
  • Relations with colleagues work centred and
    guided by formal channels
  • Group fragmentation and dissolution of the worker
    collective in the company community (labour
    matters are dealt individually with superiors)
  • 4. Personal labour capital
  • Technical knowledge and specialist skills of the
    trade, based on progressive practical experience
  • Effort, responsibility, work capacity, successful
    execution of tasks, order, seriousness and
    efficiency, following the norms, and a desire to
    improve.
  • 5. Perception of the hierarchy
  • Establishment of control and supervision
    mechanisms discipline and working without
    creating problems
  • Manager as a worker who is proficient in the
    trade

21
The trade worker (3)
  • 6. Sense of involvement in the product
  • Autonomy in the area they understand (sense of
    having a trade)
  • the result is what matters a work well done
    supervised by the superiors
  • Tasks must be well organised by the area manager
    (who knows the trade) which eliminates
    uncertainty
  • 7. Education and training
  • Specialist technical knowledge of the trade is
    acquired through experience
  • Training (specially placements) provides the
    basic techniques and knowledge, although they are
    seen as deficient
  • Continuous training is seen as a means to keep
    ones knowledge up-to-date, but few workers have
    attended it.
  • Participation increase in courses organised by
    the company of the worker (organisational culture
    and the particular needs of each job)
  • In more routine jobs, courses are not seen as
    vital for work.

22
The newcomer / unconsolidated worker(1)
  • Involvement in the profession (stability/satisfact
    ion).
  • Identity in transition, in the process of
    integration into work
  • Temporary work is considered despite their
    dissatisfaction as a normal strategic
    opportunity to accumulate experience
  • Frequent changes of job are valued as learning
    experiences (but fragmentation can difficult the
    learning of the job)
  • Low satisfaction with salary and work conditions
  • Changing jobs without promotion finding another
    job when the current one ends
  • The Significance of Work.
  • Work as a way of earning a living and obtaining
    independence
  • The work activity seen as a job, no more than
    that (but preferred to be related to the subject
    one has studied)
  • Work as a learning experience that provides
    knowledge of the sector.

23
The newcomer / unconsolidated worker (2)
  • 3. Group references
  • Dispersed labour model lack of group references
    (no sense of belonging in the company, no
    identification with the job and the collective of
    workers)
  • Fast turnover of workers difficulties with
    respect to group cohesion
  • Mutual support links between workers are
    fragmented, so that each one acts according to
    his interests and expectations within the
    company.
  • 4. Personal labour capital
  • The knowledge capital that the worker needs is
    still being accumulated.
  • What is required is the will to learn, to work
    and to make an effort, because in practice one
    can learn what one does not know
  • 5. Perception of the hierarchy
  • Relationships centred on instructions,
    supervision of the work, and reporting the
    results. Contact is functional, superficial,
    correct and formal.
  • The immediate superior formal channel for
    relations with the management for any matter with
    working conditions

24
The newcomer / unconsolidated worker (3)
  • 6. Sense of involvement in the product
  • As the expectations of changing companies rise,
    the level of personal involvement drops
  • Limited to fulfilling the requirements of the
    post without looking for additional
    responsibilities
  • Little autonomy experience of strict supervision
    of the work
  • 7. Education and training
  • Importance of the practical knowledge of the job
    acquired through official vocational training
    (but distant from real work). Interest in
    placements.
  • Increasing value of learning acquired through
    varied experience in a real job
  • Difficulties and low motivation for continuous
    training (orientation to work)
  • Difficulty of fitting periods of unemployment to
    the calendars of courses

25
The worker in the employers discourse (1)
  • Involvement in the profession (stability/satisfact
    ion).
  • Satisfaction with the job, technical knowledge
    and a vocational sense of the work
  • Good working conditions that promote his loyalty
    to the company.
  • Possibility of promotional mobility and training
    according to his own interest.
  • Importance of temporary work, arbitrary of
    promotion criteria and bad conditions working is
    underestimate.
  • The Significance of Work.
  • Feeling proud of a job-well-done as a key
    factor towards quality
  • Personal satisfaction with a vocational work
  • Group references.
  • Community model strong corporate identity linked
    with personal identity
  • Need of a stable worker identify with the company
    and commitment with his objectives, feeling that
    he is working for his own future and interests

26
The worker in the employers discourse (2)
  • 4. Personal labour capital
  • Technical knowledge use of information
    technologies, languages and customer relation
    skills.
  • Value of vocation, ambition, professional
    attitude to work, communication and teamwork and
    satisfaction with a job well done.
  • 5. Perception of the hierarchy
  • Functional understanding of hierarchy all the
    roles are relevant, playing their own functions
    for the global organization
  • Manager team appears as coordinated working
    guarantee in the global organization
  • Intermediate managers must be trusted persons,
    which share the culture and objectives of the
    company, and experimented professionals

27
The worker in the employers discourse (3)
  • 6. Sense of involvement in the product
  • This worker is strongly committed with his job,
    having awareness of being part of a collective
    effort
  • Company objectives are assumed as the workers
    own goals (he feels like working for his own
    interest).
  • In intermediate managers cases the autonomy level
    demands a strong personal commitment
  • 7. Education and training
  • Experience is a more valued factor than training,
    as a guarantee of professional behaviour
  • The importance given to formal professional
    training depends of the post in the organization
  • Continuous training seems relevant because it
    also allows facing company production needs, as
    well as worker promotion and career possibilities

28
  • TEACHERS VIEWS

29
Teachers views - Methodology
  • Questionnaires sent to all 16 schools (12 public,
    4 private) with formal VET in the sector
  • THE SAMPLE
  • 49 responses from 13 schools, mainly public
    (approx. 25 of all teachers in the sector)
  • 50 women
  • 60 between 30 and 45 years old -in charge of
    placements
  • 17 have MA, 13 a degree, 19 VET level 3
  • 21 of them studied tourism (university or VET)

30
Teachers views Inquiry assumptions
  • Working as teachers, yet teaching students to
    become professionals in the sector of tourism
  • What are their notions of work (their own and
    work on the sector) and what are the effects on
    the notions their students will develop
  • These might be based upon
  • Career
  • Initial and continuing training
  • Working conditions
  • Their images of the profession (in teaching and
    tourism)

31
Teachers views Areas of inquiry
  • Work trajectory
  • Vocational call and vocational training
  • Evaluation of the training in the sector
  • Perception of the sector
  • Relation of the training provided to labour
    market trends and needs
  • Self-appraisal as teachers
  • Career expectations
  • Their views on good workers in the sector

32
Teachers views Work trajectory
  • 42 started working before the age of 23
  • 12 have less than 5 years of educational
    experience
  • 17 have been less than 5 years in their current
    school
  • 19 have some hierarchical responsibility in the
    school
  • 16 teachers have enjoyed experience in the
    sector, 6 of which do work in the sector, with
    other 11 working out of school in other fields
  • Their experience in the sector is not used for
    taking charge of students placements
  • 18 are members of trade unions, mostly in public
    schools

33
Teachers views Vocation
  • More than half chose tourism for their call in
    the sector
  • Hardly any (4) has a record of family tradition
    in the sector, though these are the ones who work
    in the sector outside of school
  • Almost all (47) do have a vocation for teaching
    and working with young people
  • Their vocation towards tourism does not seem to
    have a relation with their role as being in
    charge of placements

34
Teachers views VET in the sector
  • 16 complain about the obsolete equipment and the
    lack of budget
  • 8 complain about lack of professionality and
    lack of vocation
  • 9 consider the lenght of VET too short to provide
    quality training
  • A vast majority of this do work in public schools
  • Only 5 of them complain about the students
  • Placements are highly valued

35
Teachers views Labour market
  • 28 consider VET is aware and respondent to labour
    market needs, 16 consider it is not
  • Those who work outside school are the ones who
    think curricula are obsolete and not attemptive
    to the context
  • Those who hold responsibility posts in the school
    tend to consider it better
  • Yet, it seems that those aware of inadequacies,
    particularly those who work outside school, dont
    do much with regard to it

36
Teachers views Their work as teachers
  • 41 are highly satisfied as teachers
  • 20 of them enjoy working with young people
  • 9 have serious concerns about their pedagogical
    capabilities
  • 3 enjoy teaching for the wage, the autonomy, the
    holidays and the working hours
  • Their sources of insatisfaction are problematic
    students, the failure of the educational system,
    relation with colleagues and the social status of
    the profession (4)
  • 20 are not able to disconnect from school

37
Teachers views Career prospects
  • Most of them do not perceive chances to promote
    within the school system teaching as a flat
    career
  • 29 have the will to improve their work and enjoy
    it
  • 2 burnouts
  • 1 moving to start his own business in the sector
  • 4 would move to another job in the sector of
    tourism
  • It is those from public schools who would change
    something in their careers (11 of them are civil
    servants), those in private schools are happy to
    remain as they are
  • More than half feel overeducated in regard to the
    sector and pedagogies continuing education is
    not highly valued

38
The worker in the teachers discourse (1)
  • Involvement in the profession
  • Ready to move and to work hard and to accept what
    the profession brings
  • Be patient to find something that matches
    expectations
  • Significance of work
  • High competition, though the company is a social
    agent
  • You dont work for money here, you have to be
    creative and innovative, and care for your team
  • Corporate references
  • Self employment as a goal in the long term
    (cooks)

39
The worker in the teachers discourse (2)
  • Labour capital
  • Ethical values for optimal performance honest,
    clean, responsible, good colleague, patient,
    kind, willing to improve, serious, punctual,
    disciplined
  • Technical knowledge
  • Experience of the hierarchy
  • Superiors expect from them the same as clients
  • It is their responsibility to adapt to the
    circumstances

40
The worker in the teachers discourse (3)
  • Involvement in the product
  • Your own performance is your best reward,
    contributing to your self-esteem and recognition
    among colleagues
  • References to training
  • Importance of theoretical knowledge as well as
    practice
  • Will to learn, to improve, be motivated, aware of
    innovation
  • It is their responsibility and it takes
    important efforts- to keep up to date
  • Your call makes you get involved in training

41
  • STUDENTS VIEWS

42
Students view Methodology (1)
  • Data gathering
  • (i) Questionnaire
  • (ii) Debate upon a case developed from the pilot
    interviews to employees
  • (iii) Projective technique with slides of real
    workplace settings and situations in the sector.
  • Information gathered in the subject area
    Introduction to the world of work.
  • Recorded in tapes and transcribed.

43
Students view Methodology (2)
  • The sample
  • 8 schools that offer level 3 VET for either
    restoration or hotelry
  • (i) 2 private one of them promoted by employers
    in the sector
  • (ii) 2 promoted by the governmental agency for
    the development of the sector
  • (iii) 4 of them public VET schools.
  • Nearly 60 women
  • Age range between 16 and 45 years-old
  • Most of them work or have worked in the sector

44
Students view Inquiry assumptions
  • Two main research questions
  • How they are (re)socialized in these VET courses.
  • What notions of work develop these students.
  • These might be based upon
  • Their notion of work.
  • Their career expectations.
  • Their ideal models (what a good professional
    should be).
  • Information from subject areas Students work
    experience and introduction into the world of
    work.

45
Students view Notion of work
  • The main atractive feature is how dinamic the
    sector is for students.
  • They are so glad with the work that they dont
    mind seasonality, timetables and wages (they even
    think that wages are better than in other
    professions)
  • Satisfied with training received in VET schools.
    They perceive themselves as well prepared and
    ready to start working anywhere.
  • Never stop learning. Most of them want to go on
    studying.

46
Students view Future perspective
  • They perceived themselves well placed in five
    years.
  • All of them want to go on further education
    (university degree).
  • Future workplace good wage and good
    possibilities of learning on-the-job.
  • Find a job easy and quick.

47
Students view Models
  • Know how to deal with public.
  • Interest on learning.
  • To be professional.
  • Responsible.
  • Patient.
  • Humanity.
  • To be a good mate.
  • Perseverance.
  • Dedication.
  • Need to be able to make sacrifices.
  • Autonomous.
  • Creativity.

48
Students view Work experience
  • Labour experience in the sector due to
  • Need of pocket money.
  • Learning.
  • Experience.
  • Need to work.
  • Pay their studies.
  • Most of them have an eventual relation with
    sector, but want to look for something better.

49
The worker in the students discourse (1)
  • Involvement in the profession
  • Ready to move and to work hard and to accept
    extra hours, long working days, working on
    holidays
  • If you work hard and you are good, they will know
    and you will be able to promote
  • Significance of work
  • This is a call, you have to feel it
  • You find your rewards in satisfying the client
    and the very fact of working with people
  • Corporate references
  • Working for a well known chain is good for the
    conditions, not always the prestige
  • Self employment as a goal for some (cooks)

50
The worker in the teachers discourse (2)
  • Labour capital
  • The values of the vocation must show here for
    they are the key to professionality clean,
    responsible, good colleague, patient, kind,
    willing to improve, serious, punctual,
    disciplined
  • You have to master the trade dedication, spirit
    of constant improvement, ready to sacrifice
  • Experience of the hierarchy
  • Superiors may cause problems and they are
    perceived as a source of conflict

51
The worker in the students discourse (3)
  • Involvement in the product
  • Your work for yourself, then you do good for the
    client
  • The quality of your work is what pays for the
    working hours and low wages
  • When your work is acknowledged, that keeps you
    going
  • References to training
  • Importance of having a qualification
  • Work experience is what counts mainly
  • Most of them are attending VET to compete in
    better conditions
  • Training is a load but it comes with the trade

52
CONCLUDING REMARKS
  • Common aspects in discourses of the different
    groups
  • Discussion of findings

53
COMMON ASPECTS IN DISCOURSES (1)
  • There seems to be a pride of working for the
    sector, and this is a topic explanation to
    justify its peculiarities
  • Students as well as teachers are aware of the
    sector trends
  • Students as well as teachers are aware of the
    working conditions
  • The role of teamwork is important in the sector,
    insofar we are all in the same boat

54
COMMON ASPECTS IN DISCOURSES (2)
  • Because of the emotional aspects of discourse,
    socialization seems to be very strong
  • In the case of cooks, there seems to be a
    particular community of practice differentiated
    from the rest
  • Many factors seem to contribute to the
    development of a sense of belonging to the
    profession
  • There are opportunities in the sector and
    therefore professional expectations are raised at
    all levels

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DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS (1)
  • There seems to be a strong influence of
    discourses of employers embedded in all other
    agents
  • Such dominant discourse provides elements
    anchoring workers identities
  • Socialization is purposefully promoted in both
    formal and informal ways

56
DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS (2)
  • The occupational role as well as position in
    hierarchy have an impact upon identity discourses
  • Tensions are found between sources of
    satisfaction and insatisfaction. Anchors to solve
    those tensions are the calling, the occupation
    ethics, common effort, identification of all with
    the service provided
  • Growing importance of formal education and of
    having accreditations, despite experience is what
    counts more and there is not much use of
    continuing training

57
DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS (3)
  • Individualization and fragmentation of labour
    relations there are no corporate discourses and
    workers assume this, despite the weak situation
    in which they find
  • Employers seem to ignore the existence of
    precarity in the sector, but also workers and
    students perceive it as caused by lack of
    professionality and search for identity anchors
    like the calling to justify this
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