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Billingsley, Bonnie S. – Journal of Special Education Leadership, 2005
The shortage of special education teachers is due in part to high attrition, especially among new entrants. Improving teacher retention and quality requires a holistic view of new teachers' needs, an understanding of the contexts in which they work, as well as the types of support that are needed. A leader's model highlights major considerations…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Special Education Teachers, Special Education, Teacher Shortage
Harris, Mary M.; Holdman, Linda; Clark, Robin; Harris, T. Robert – Rural Educator, 2005
The success of Project Launch, a teacher induction program sponsored by a regional teacher center and a consortium of universities, is compared for rural and non-rural participants. Indicators of success include teacher accomplishment of action plan goals, teacher self and mentor assessment of teaching strengths related to action plan goals,…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Beginning Teacher Induction, Mentors, Comparative Analysis
Haberman, Martin – New Educator, 2005
This article discusses teacher burnout which scholars define as a condition caused by depersonalization, exhaustion, and a diminished sense of accomplishment. A psychological model of how stress leads to burnout describes it as a syndrome resulting from teachers' inability to protect themselves against threats to their self esteem and well-being.…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Self Esteem, Teacher Burnout, Coping
Anthony, Taiwanna D.; Kritsonis, William A. – Online Submission, 2006
Highly qualified teachers and administrators are in high demand. Too often the challenge is not simply preparing more teachers and administrators, but preparing the teachers and administrators we have. The overall quality of teachers and administrators is misunderstood and misdirected. Do states have a sufficient surplus of teachers and…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Administrators, Teachers, Public Education
Robertson, Mark – Principal Leadership, 2006
The author conducted a study of reasons why novice teachers become disenchanted with the administrative support in their schools. Using the ideas of Rosenholtz and Simpson (1990) as a basis for his research, the author designed and administered a survey to 53 novice teachers and 15 building principals regarding the factors that influence novice…
Descriptors: Time Management, Principals, Classroom Techniques, Beginning Teachers
Challenging Current Notions of "Highly Qualified Teachers" through Work in a Teachers' Inquiry Group
Nieto, Sonia – Journal of Teacher Education, 2003
A small group of Boston Public School teachers met for a year to explore the question of what keeps teachers going, a question that bears asking because of the precarious situation of public education today. In this article, I describe the work of the What Keeps Teachers Going? inquiry group as a way to challenge current notions of what it means…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Public School Teachers, Coping, Educational Legislation

Lyson, Thomas A.; Falk, William W. – American Educational Research Journal, 1984
Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of the High School Class of 1972 (NLS), this study shows that almost half the NLS respondents teaching in 1979 did not report teaching plans in high school, whereas three-fourths of those planning to teach were not teaching in 1979. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Elementary School Teachers, Employment Opportunities, High Schools

Bornfield, Gail; And Others – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 1997
In interviews with 86 rural special education teachers, issues of mobility and opportunity were cited most often as reasons why teachers left their jobs. Although results indicated that both leavers and stayers were dissatisfied with employment conditions, teachers who chose to extend their teaching contracts were more closely tied to the…
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Elementary Secondary Education, Employment Opportunities, Faculty Mobility

Kass, Sarah – Journal of Education, 1994
Describes, from one teacher's experiences, the difficulties of teaching Shakespeare in a Chelsea (Massachusetts) high school and how these problems were eventually overcome. The narrative presents students' reactions. (GR)
Descriptors: High Schools, Old English Literature, Personal Narratives, Public Schools
Lemke, June Canty – Small Town, 1994
Addresses issues related to attracting and keeping qualified teachers in rural schools. Discusses advantages and disadvantages of teaching in rural areas, preparation of rural administrators for dealing with elevated attrition levels and special needs of new teachers, ideal teacher requirements for rural positions, orientation and support services…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Administrator Role, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Mobility

Colbert, Joel A.; Wolff, Diana E. – Journal of Teacher Education, 1992
Describes a Los Angeles collaborative university-district teacher induction program which focused on retaining alternative certification teachers in difficult urban schools. The collaboration increased teacher retention, providing systematic support and assistance and reducing feelings of isolation through cooperative planning. After three years,…
Descriptors: Alternative Teacher Certification, Beginning Teacher Induction, College School Cooperation, Collegiality

Coladarci, Theodore – Journal of Experimental Education, 1992
The degree to which teachers' sense of efficacy and other hypothesized influences on commitment to teaching predicts responses to the question of whether they would enter teaching again was studied for 170 elementary school teachers. General and personal efficacy were the two strongest predictors of commitment to teaching. (SLD)
Descriptors: Decision Making, Educational Environment, Elementary Education, Elementary School Teachers

Cooley, Elizabeth; Yovanoff, Paul – Exceptional Children, 1996
This study of 92 special educators and related service providers evaluated two interventions (a series of stress management workshops and a peer-collaboration program) on factors correlated with turnover (burnout, job satisfaction, and organizational commitment). The interventions showed promise as a means of providing on-the-job support for…
Descriptors: Ancillary School Services, At Risk Persons, Disabilities, Intervention
Kelley, Carolyn; Finnigan, Kara – Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, 2004
Through No Child Left Behind, states receive funds that can be used to address "challenges to teacher quality, whether they concern teacher preparation and qualifications of new teachers, recruitment and hiring, induction, professional development, teacher retention, or the need for more capable principals and assistant principals to serve as…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Teacher Effectiveness, Federal Legislation, Teacher Persistence
Ingersoll, Richard M. – Sociology of Education, 2005
Few educational problems have received more attention than has the failure to ensure that the nation's classrooms are staffed by qualified teachers. Many states have pushed for more-rigorous preservice teacher education, training, and certification standards. Moreover, a host of recruitment initiatives have attempted to increase the supply of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Teacher Effectiveness, Employment Level, Elementary Secondary Education