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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Bernardita Moreno – School Leadership & Management, 2024
This study sought to explore teachers' perceptions of new principals (NPs) and how these perceptions influenced different aspects of their work environment. The research was conducted using case study methodology of three schools in Melbourne, Australia. Data collection tools included semi-structured interviews of teachers and principals,…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Principals, Foreign Countries, Work Environment
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Fiona Longmuir; Amanda McKay; Beatriz Gallo Cordoba; Kelly-Ann Allen; Michael Phillips – Journal of School Violence, 2025
In the context of teaching workforce shortages, this study examined teachers' perceptions of safety, role satisfaction, and their intent to remain in the profession, in Australia. Findings from two iterations of a survey of a total of 8293 teachers revealed that 20% to 25% of participants felt unsafe in their schools. The results also showed that…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, School Safety, Violence, Work Environment
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Dicke, Theresa; Parker, Philip D.; Guo, Jiesi; Basarkod, Geetanjali; Marsh, Herbert W.; Deady, Mark; Harvey, Samuel; Riley, Philip – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2022
Principal strain and burnout is a major issue in desperate need of further investigation and solutions. Deepening our understanding of emotional exhaustion, the central dimension of burnout, would greatly further this pursuit. Using a large, longitudinal, representative sample of Australian school principals, the present study decomposed emotional…
Descriptors: Principals, Emotional Response, Burnout, Work Environment
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Striepe, Michelle; Thompson, Pauline; Robertson, Sylvia; Devi, Mohini; Gurr, David; Longmuir, Fiona; Taylor, Adam; Cunningham, Christine – School Leadership & Management, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused major disruption to education and highlighted the importance of effective leadership during times of crisis. This paper considers the impact of the pandemic on school leaders in Australia, Fiji, and New Zealand. A secondary analysis of data from five interpretivist, qualitative studies was conducted. The aim of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Leadership Responsibility, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Elizabeth Allotta – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2023
Increasing global teacher attrition rates and the difficulty of filling teacher positions in Australian schools have led to rising concerns about teacher supply and demand. While attrition factors and rates have been known for over thirty years, little has changed or improved. This raises the question, 'how and why do some teachers continue while…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence, Work Environment, Faculty Workload
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Stacey, Meghan; Wilson, Rachel; McGrath-Champ, Susan – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2022
The work of teachers is often understood primarily in relation to student learning rather than as a form of labour for the worker in question. While such a focus is understandable, it can fail to recognize the relationship between conditions of work and the character or nature of that work. In this article, we engage with the issue of teachers'…
Descriptors: Teaching Load, Teaching Conditions, Work Environment, Teacher Attitudes
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Thompson, Greg; Mockler, Nicole; Hogan, Anna – European Educational Research Journal, 2022
This paper explores perceptions of work intensification around the world. Underpinning this analysis is C. Wright Mills' (1959) argument that many personal troubles are public issues, and the notion that a significant dimension of the privatisation of public education, a concern of public education advocates worldwide, is the ways in which school…
Descriptors: Accountability, Privatization, Public Education, Governance
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Carroll, Annemaree; Forrest, Kylee; Sanders-O'Connor, Emma; Flynn, Libby; Bower, Julie M.; Fynes-Clinton, Samuel; York, Ashley; Ziaei, Maryam – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2022
Concerns regarding high rates of teacher stress and burnout are present globally. Yet there is limited current data regarding the severity of stress, or the role of intrapersonal and environmental factors in relation to teacher stress and burnout within the Australian context. The present study, conducted over an 18-month period, prior to the…
Descriptors: Teacher Burnout, Stress Variables, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Holloway, Jessica – Critical Studies in Education, 2021
The collection of papers presented in this issue of Critical Studies in Education adds to the expansive body of work on teachers and teaching. Collectively, the papers draw our attention to new ways the field is problematising the emerging and evolving conditions that shape the work, lives and identities of teachers. With this editorial…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods, Professionalism, Professional Identity
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Lambert, Kirsten; Gray, Christina – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
This paper explores the hyper-performative expectations of early career teachers (ECTs) in the context of neoliberal education assemblages. The need to support and retain beginning teachers is a salient issue in the context of troubling rates of teacher attrition. The study explores how ECTs perceive teacher identities in response to national…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Neoliberalism, Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility
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Horwood, Marcus; Marsh, Herbert W.; Parker, Philip D.; Riley, Philip; Guo, Jiesi; Dicke, Theresa – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2021
Paradoxically, school leaders as a group report high levels of burnout but also high job satisfaction and passion for their work. School principals are passionate about their job, but this passion can be a double-edged sword leading to good (job satisfaction) and bad (burnout) outcomes. We extend the dualistic model of passion (DMP) in a study of…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Principals, Burnout, Job Satisfaction
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Sullivan, Anna; Johnson, Bruce; Simons, Michele; Tippett, Neil – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2021
Early career teachers are increasingly required to be 'classroom ready' upon graduation and to demonstrate capabilities that match their more experienced colleagues. They are also joining a profession that is characterised by increased scrutiny and accountability driven by standards that seek to identify the hallmarks of good teaching. This…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Professional Autonomy, Teacher Competencies, Teacher Effectiveness
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Rowston, Kim; Bower, Matt; Woodcock, Stuart – Technology, Pedagogy and Education, 2021
Studies continue to highlight the value career-change teachers bring to teaching. Yet, little research has investigated the incumbent technology skills and beliefs of this cohort, and how these skills impact their future teaching practice. This article presents the results from a mixed-method explanatory case study investigating this phenomenon.…
Descriptors: Work Environment, Educational Environment, Environmental Influences, Career Change
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Hogan, Jarrod P.; White, Peta J. – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2021
Isolation, organisational pressures, and role-related distress, can result in teachers, particularly early career teachers (ECTs), experiencing greater risk of burnout. For many ECTs, a lack of practical strategies for dealing with these conditions contributes to this. Using self-study methodology, this research unpacks why ECTs experience…
Descriptors: Teacher Burnout, Experienced Teachers, Coping, Beginning Teachers
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Papatraianou, Lisa H.; Le Cornu, Rosie – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2014
Formal processes such as ongoing induction, mentoring and professional development are commonly recorded as factors that can enhance early career teacher resilience. Yet, informal processes, including the support provided by personal and professional networks are not often acknowledged nor made explicit. Drawing on two qualitative studies, we…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Resilience (Psychology), Teacher Education Programs, Qualitative Research
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