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Showing 1 to 15 of 27 results Save | Export
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Pauline Mary Ross; Elliot Scanes – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2025
Australian higher education has faced both global economic and environmental challenges, including most recently the COVID-19 pandemic. To deliver in this resource constrained environment, academic workforce and academic roles are being reshaped. Teaching and education focused academic roles are rapidly increasing but come with opportunities and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society), Sustainability, Teaching (Occupation)
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Joanne Dixon – Education Research and Perspectives, 2023
Teacher mental health and wellbeing is neglected in policy relative to student mental health and wellbeing. Yet there are ongoing concerns around teachers' stress levels and their impact on students and teacher shortages. Through a desk-based literature review relevant literature, current reports and statistics were examined to ascertain…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Well Being, Teaching Conditions, Stress Variables
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Sharon McDonough; Narelle Lemon – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2024
The spread of Coronavirus (COVID-19) across the globe has had a significant impact on teachers and teaching with countries around the world closing schools in an effort to slow the spread of the virus. Such a mass cessation of traditional face-to-face teaching has required schools and teachers to move rapidly to remote and, primarily, online…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Teaching Conditions, Well Being
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Meghan Stacey; Mihajla Gavin; Scott Fitzgerald; Susan McGrath-Champ; Rachel Wilson – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2024
Teacher workload is a growing problem internationally. In this article, we analyse an attempt by the state education bureaucracy of New South Wales (NSW), Australia, to address this through the 'Quality Time Program'. Drawing on labour process theory and Carol Bacchi's framework of 'What's the problem represented to be?', we analyse how the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Faculty Workload, Educational Policy, Public Education
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Collie, Rebecca J. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2023
Background: Identifying factors implicated in teachers' well-being and turnover intentions is important for driving research, policy, and practice to better support teachers in their work. Aims: This study examined the role of three job resources (autonomy-supportive leadership, relatedness with colleagues and students) and three job demands…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teachers, Well Being, Faculty Mobility
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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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De Clercq, Mikaël; Watt, Helen M. G.; Richardson, Paul W. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2022
Drawing on an existing typology, this study used latent transition profile analysis (LTPA) to examine changes in the striving and wellbeing profiles among teachers from their early until midcareer. Five profiles were identified (Sparing, Good Health, Ambitious, Burnout, and Wornout) among a longitudinal sample of 414 Australian secondary and…
Descriptors: Well Being, Secondary School Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Characteristics
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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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Liang, Zixi; Zhang, Hongzhi – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic has considerably disrupted teacher education. In Australian, the placement days required to meet the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL) standards were reduced for the 2020 final-year graduate teachers. Simultaneously, the COVID-19 disruptions posed significant challenges for first-year teachers.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Beginning Teachers
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Papadopoulos, Angelika – Higher Education Research and Development, 2017
In quantifying and qualifying the scope of academic labour, workload models serve multiple ends. They are intended to facilitate equitable and transparent divisions of academic work, to provide academics with a sense of whether their workload is reasonable relative to their colleagues, and universities with a mechanism for rationalising the…
Descriptors: Models, Higher Education, Faculty Workload, Teacher Surveys
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Rajendran, Natalia; Watt, Helen M. G.; Richardson, Paul W. – Australian Educational Researcher, 2020
Correlates of turnover intent among primary (N = 580) and secondary (N = 675), male (N = 254) and female (N = 999) teachers, were examined through the lens of the job demands-resources (JD-R) model. Multigroup structural equation modelling indicated that job demands (workload, student misbehaviour), and the personal demand of work-family conflict,…
Descriptors: Teacher Burnout, Intention, Faculty Mobility, Elementary School Teachers
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Deborah M. Netolicky – Journal of Professional Capital and Community, 2020
Purpose: This paper explores, from the perspective of an Australian pracademic, how school leaders are leading during the global COVID-19 pandemic. Design/methodology/approach: This essay explores the tensions navigated by school leaders leading during this time of global crisis, by looking to research as well as the author's lived experience.…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Pandemics, COVID-19, Accountability
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Yasué, Maï; Jeno, Lucas M.; Langdon, Jody L. – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2019
We extended the research on autonomy-supportive teaching to universities and examined the relationships between autonomous motivation to teach and autonomy-supportive teaching. Autonomously motivated university instructors were more autonomy-supportive instructors. The freedom to make pedagogical decisions was negatively correlated with external…
Descriptors: Professional Autonomy, College Faculty, Class Size, Faculty Workload
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Downes, Natalie; Roberts, Philip – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2018
The staffing of rural, remote and isolated schools remains a significant issue of concern in Australian education. In this paper we provide a comprehensive account of the Australian research related to the staffing of rural schools post 2004. The review identifies the overarching themes of the opportunities and challenges of staffing rural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural Schools, Teacher Persistence, Preservice Teacher Education
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Ascione, Judith; Bramley, Nicolette – Babel, 2012
The primary objective of this study is to identify the effect of reducing teaching hours from five to four face-to-face teaching hours in a beginners' Japanese course at the University of Canberra, Australia. The results of 2007, 2008 and 2009 cohorts of Japanese students' results are compared to consider the effect of the reduction in classroom…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Teaching Conditions, Faculty Workload
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