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Thokozane P. Dyosini – South African Journal of Childhood Education, 2024
Background: South Africa's teacher retention crisis calls for policy makers, school leaders and teachers to explore ways for professional growth. This study examined six novice teachers' experiences and views on continuous professional development (CPD) and how it benefits teachers as they transition from mentees to mentors. Aim: The study aimed…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Teacher Attitudes, Barriers, Teacher Persistence
Anne Southall – British Journal of Special Education, 2024
Research documenting the effects of trauma in early childhood describes the profound and long-term consequences of child abuse and neglect on the developing brain and the subsequent deficits in critical cognitive and social development. While educators have increasingly endeavoured to understand this impact and become more 'trauma-informed' in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Trauma Informed Approach, Barriers, Mild Intellectual Disability
Sandie Wong; Rebecca Bull; Tamara Cumming; Laura McFarland – Cogent Education, 2024
Early childhood educators' work, especially with children and families experiencing vulnerability, is complex, highly skilled, and can place significant psychological burdens on educators. This may adversely affect educators' well-being and contribute to the high levels of attrition seen globally. This article reports on an evaluation of a…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Clinical Supervision (of Teachers), Early Childhood Teachers, Teacher Welfare
Graham, Anne; Truscott, Julia – Education 3-13, 2020
Student and teacher wellbeing are now a prominent concern within education systems internationally. Meditation and mindfulness programs form part of the response to addressing this. Research and practice to date has focused on the benefits of such interventions for students "or" teachers, despite considerable evidence of connections…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Student Welfare, Teacher Welfare, Program Effectiveness
Uma Mazyck Jayakumar; Rita Kohli – Thresholds in Education, 2023
Over the past year, sweeping local and state-wide policies framed as bans against "CRT" are being propagated to restrict how race and racism can be taught in K-12 schools across the nation. As a result, schools are increasingly becoming a place where teachers face interpersonal and professional risk for teaching about US racial…
Descriptors: Censorship, Academic Freedom, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers
Sharifian, Maryam Sadat; Kennedy, Patricia – International Journal of the Whole Child, 2019
Teaching is traditionally considered one of the most stressful of occupations. Lack of experience, training, and working with children with behavior problems represent variables shown to increase teachers' stress. Research also demonstrates teachers' stress can reduce their performance and also might lead to negative attitudes (Greenglass &…
Descriptors: War, Trauma, Classroom Techniques, Teacher Welfare
Song, Huan; Gu, Qing; Zhang, Zhonghua – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2020
This article examines the nature of teachers' subjective wellbeing. Drawing upon the survey evidence from a three-year mixed methods study in China, the article explores the dynamic interaction between key aspects of teachers' subjective wellbeing: "altruism" and "self-efficacy" (psychological functioning) and "work…
Descriptors: Teacher Welfare, Teacher Salaries, Job Satisfaction, Altruism
Mand, Rahat; Aajiz, Niaz Muhammad; Nabi, Mohammad – Pakistan Journal of Distance and Online Learning, 2018
The purpose of this study is to analyze critically the two main categories of teachers' unions as progressive and aggressive teachers' unions and their positive and negative effects on students' achievements at secondary school level. The researcher therefore determined to find out the exact role of teachers' unions. All secondary school teachers…
Descriptors: Unions, Academic Achievement, Teacher Welfare, Fringe Benefits
Willingham-McLain, Laurel; Margolis, Jason; Klingler, Nicole – Journal of Faculty Development, 2019
This article outlines the program design, benefits, and challenges of a university-wide, near-peer faculty-mentoring program. The mentoring exchange facilitates group leadership by early-career faculty who have recently succeeded at the steps incoming faculty will face. Five primary themes emerged from qualitative analysis of six focus groups:…
Descriptors: Program Design, Mentors, Peer Relationship, College Faculty
Moon, Byongook; Saw, Guan; McCluskey, John – Journal of School Violence, 2020
A growing body of empirical research on teacher victimization indicates that it is widespread and yields negative consequences. However, limited research has investigated the relationship between teacher victimization and turnover. In this study, using longitudinal data from approximately 1,300 teachers in a metropolitan area in Texas, USA, we…
Descriptors: Victims, Correlation, Urban Areas, Teacher Transfer
Liebowitz, David D.; Porter, Lorna – Review of Educational Research, 2019
Principals are understood to be critical actors in improving teaching and learning conditions in schools; however, relatively little is known about the leadership strategies to which principals should dedicate their time and effort to improve outcomes. We review the empirical literature from 51 studies of principal behaviors and student, teacher,…
Descriptors: Principals, Administrator Behavior, Outcomes of Education, School Effectiveness
Ciuciu, Jessica; Robertson, Natalie – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2019
This article explores the experiences of four individuals who changed careers into early childhood teaching in Victoria, Australia and later left the profession. The study was conducted with a narrative inquiry approach and reveals insight into motivations for becoming an early childhood teacher (ECT), experiences of being an ECT and factors that…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Career Change, Foreign Countries, Teaching Experience
Manning, Alex; Brock, Richard; Towers, Emma – Journal of Social Science Education, 2020
Purpose: Responding to research reporting low-levels of teacher wellbeing in England, policy makers have begun to implement strategies to support wellbeing. Given the recent introduction of such policy, this exploratory study describes the wellbeing support being offered to teachers, and perceptions of its impact on wellbeing. Method: A purposeful…
Descriptors: Teacher Welfare, Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Stress Management
Buric, Irena; Sliškovic, Ana; Penezic, Zvjezdan – Educational Psychology, 2019
This study is aimed at testing the reciprocal relationships between teacher burnout, psychopathological symptoms, and negative student-related emotions, and to explore the protective role of resilience in these aspects of teachers' psychological well-being. A study based on a two-wave panel design was conducted among 941 school teachers at two…
Descriptors: Teacher Welfare, Teacher Burnout, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Resilience (Psychology)
Stoloff, Sacha; Boulanger, Maude; Lavallée, Élisabeth; Glaude-Roy, Julien – Journal of Education and Learning, 2020
The teaching profession has been studied and discussed from a problem-oriented point of view and cultivated by a problem-oriented scientific tradition. Years of research have enabled a better understanding of difficult teaching conditions and teachers' ill-being; an ideological and scientific shift, however, appears necessary to enrich and broaden…
Descriptors: Teacher Welfare, Physical Education Teachers, Foreign Countries, Emotional Intelligence