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Kearney, Sean – Issues in Educational Research, 2017
Beginning teacher induction is becoming an increasingly popular process in acculturating teachers to their new careers. The problems that teachers face early in their careers are well known, and effective and ongoing induction is one of the foremost practices for alleviating the pressures that teachers face early in their careers. While induction…
Descriptors: Beginning Teacher Induction, Secondary School Teachers, Best Practices, Case Studies
Hobbs, Linda; Quinn, Frances – European Journal of Teacher Education, 2021
Compared to their more experienced colleagues, novice teachers are more likely to experience burn-out and leave the profession. They are also more likely to be assigned out-of-field. This paper shines a light on the emotional and cognitive nature of what is involved for these teachers as they learn to teach out-of-field. Fortune lines technique…
Descriptors: Teacher Qualifications, Teacher Certification, Teacher Placement, Beginning Teachers
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
Rymarz, Richard – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2020
This paper examines the experiences of six teachers from a regional, Australian diocese who attended World Youth Day (WYD). It also reports on aspects of their worldview and their experience working in Catholic schools. Overall participants were very positive about working in Catholic schools, and though not connected in an ongoing way with parish…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Foreign Countries, Catholic Educators, World Views
Weuffen, Sara; Andrews, Tulsa; Roberts, Kate – Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 2020
Despite their position as providers of tertiary education, universities sit beyond normalised discourses of education where qualifications, registration, and continuing professional development are concerned. In this case study, we explore how participation in an academic induction program (AIP) builds foundational andragogy knowledge and skills…
Descriptors: Andragogy, Faculty Development, Professional Continuing Education, Teaching Skills
Francisco, Susanne – Studies in Continuing Education, 2020
Vocational Education and Training (VET) teachers often begin teaching without teaching qualifications, and much of their learning necessarily takes place in the workplace. VET teaching is recognised as complex and requiring a broad range of skills and capabilities. At the same time, support for VET teacher learning in the workplace has been…
Descriptors: Vocational Education Teachers, Workplace Learning, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Education
Brosseuk, Deb; Downes, Lynn – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2022
This paper explores the interconnectedness between Australian teachers' literacy practices and their pedagogic identity during the global pandemic. In doing so, the paper presents pedagogic identity as a dynamic, ever-evolving construct involving teachers and their teaching environment. Findings are reported from a case study of early years and…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Online Courses, Literacy Education, Correlation
Willis, Alison; Thiele, Catherine; Dwyer, Rachael; Grainger, Peter; Simon, Susan – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2021
This paper presents the start-up methodology for a project that leverages the opportunities that social media affords to give teachers voice and agency. In response to negative press about teachers in mainstream media, coupled with research that shows that teachers are working hard to meet student academic and wellbeing needs, the researchers…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching (Occupation), Reputation, Social Media
Bosanquet, Agnes; Mantai, Lilia; Fredericks, Vanessa – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
In the neoliberal university, how do doctoral candidates (PhDs) and early career academics (ECAs) experience time? This analysis brings together two qualitative studies in Australian universities: interviews with 64 PhD candidates, and a survey of 522 ECAs on teaching and research experience, and identity and career development. The data is…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Universities, Graduate Students, Doctoral Programs
Willis, Jill; Churchward, Peter; Beutel, Denise; Spooner-Lane, Rebecca; Crosswell, Leanne; Curtis, Elizabeth – School Leadership & Management, 2019
Mentors for beginning teachers in schools are often unacknowledged middle leaders in their schools. Through their work with beginning teachers, they not only provide local leadership in their contexts, they influence and shape the work of the next generation of teachers. Government-funded mentor training for the purpose of supporting beginning…
Descriptors: Mentors, Beginning Teachers, Foreign Countries, Educational Practices
Sasha Janes; Julian Chen – Australian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2024
Netnography, a qualitative research approach, entails observing, analysing, and interpreting online data. This netnography explores how teacher agency, emotion regulation, and professional identity were enacted by a novice Chinese language teacher in response to emergency remote teaching (ERT) in Australia amid the global pandemic. Ecologically…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Chinese, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
den Brok, Perry; Wubbels, Theo; van Tartwijk, Jan – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2017
Based on a review of recent studies and reports, this research investigates attrition among beginning teachers in the Netherlands as well as reasons for teacher attrition, and compares the finding with studies on this topic conducted elsewhere in the world. The findings suggest that attrition among beginning teachers in the Netherlands with a…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Faculty Mobility, Foreign Countries, Professional Identity
Kelly, Nick; Sim, Cheryl; Ireland, Michael – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2018
This paper presents evidence from a nationally representative sample of early career teachers about those likely to miss out on formal support, and the employment conditions associated with this absence of support. It uses survey data from the Staff in Australia's Schools Survey. Consistent with existing research, our results suggest a…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Beginning Teacher Induction, Teacher Surveys, Correlation
Longaretti, Lynette; Toe, Dianne – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2022
Teachers with a high sense of self-efficacy are more resilient to difficulties, experience greater job satisfaction and have higher expectations of their students. This study investigated teacher self-efficacy in high performing teachers at two points in their development: 1) as preservice teachers, halfway through their undergraduate degree using…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Beginning Teachers, College Graduates, Self Efficacy
Jennifer Anne Robinson – British Journal of Music Education, 2024
Early-career secondary school music teachers navigate many challenges as they settle into the profession. These include consolidating their knowledge of subject content, gaining classroom confidence and honing skills in classroom management. In addition, their sense of belonging can be enhanced by working at collegial relationships within their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Music Teachers, Beginning Teachers