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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Zimmerman, Aaron Samuel – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2018
Burnout is a significant problem that continues to plague the teaching profession. In this essay, I argue that the burnout of early-career teachers is not solely a function of personal factors (e.g., their knowledge, their beliefs, their pedagogical skills, their commitment to the teaching profession) but also a function of the organizational…
Descriptors: Teacher Burnout, Teaching Conditions, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Education Programs
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Johnson, Susan Moore – Harvard Educational Review, 2012
In this article, Susan Moore Johnson calls for a balanced approach to improving teaching and learning, one that focuses on both teachers and the contexts in which they work. Drawing on over a decade of research on the experiences of new teachers, Johnson argues that focusing on the effectiveness of individuals while ignoring how their schools are…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, School Organization, Teacher Improvement, Teacher Characteristics
Shakrani, Sharif – Education Policy Center at Michigan State University, 2008
Research studies have documented a strong link between perennial high rates of beginning teacher attrition and teacher shortages that impact teaching, especially in the major urban areas of the United States. It is widely concluded that one of the pivotal causes of inadequate school academic performance is a teacher shortage and the resulting…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Disadvantaged Schools, Teacher Persistence, Academic Achievement
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Schlichte, Jacqueline; Yssel, Nina; Merbler, John – Preventing School Failure, 2005
The attrition rate of 1st-year special education teachers is a mounting concern. Researchers have identified several factors that contribute to the stress that many novice teachers experience and their subsequent attrition. If necessary support from mentors, colleagues, and administrators is not in place, many 1st-year teachers opt to leave the…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Special Education Teachers, Mentors, Career Change
Barnhardt, Ray – Sharing Our Pathways, 1999
This article discusses preparing teachers to teach in rural Alaska. An anecdote illustrates how outsiders who come to work in rural Alaska get into trouble because they are unprepared for conditions unique to the North. These conditions end up being viewed as impediments rather than opportunities. The same is true for the field of education. Of…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, Beginning Teacher Induction, Beginning Teachers, Cross Cultural Training
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Andrews, Byllie D'Amato; Quinn, Robert J. – Clearing House, 2004
Beginning teachers are often given teaching assignments that would challenge even the most skillful veteran teachers. Such assignments can take several forms: teaching in a subject area for which the teacher is not certified; having too many class preparations; "floating" from classroom to classroom; working with low-ability, unmotivated, or…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, High Schools, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Persistence
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Bryan, Betsy – Rural Educator, 1986
Compares and contrasts first year teaching experiences of a grandmother (1919) and granddaughter (1980) in small, isolated, rural New Mexico schools. Offers suggestions for improving recruitment and retention of rural teachers in areas of salary, housing conditions, school philosophy and morale, student population, and community life. (NEC)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education, Labor Turnover, Personal Narratives
Ligon, Jerry A. – American School Board Journal, 1988
Four suggestions are offered for making teachers' first year on the job more than just a test of endurance: provide adequate supplies, make assignments carefully, do not overload them, and provide a support system. (TE)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education, Teacher Administrator Relationship, Teacher Morale
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Schutt, Eileen F. – Music Educators Journal, 1983
A music teacher talks about the hard lessons he learned in his first year of teaching in a small, rural, elementary and secondary school. Student discipline problems, poor class attendance, exhaustion, and problems with parents reduced his initial idealism and optimism. (RM)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Classroom Techniques, Discipline, Elementary Secondary Education
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Tabachnick, B. Robert – Teaching and Teacher Education, 1989
This article examines some of the advantages and problems in using qualitative (naturalistic) research methods to understand teaching, learning, and schooling. An example of naturalistic research involving first year teachers is included. (IAH)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Generalization
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MacDonald, Victoria; Speece, Deborah L. – Journal of Special Education, 2001
This article describes the challenges faced by a first-year special educator of children with emotional disturbances. In addition to academic diversity and behavioral challenges, there were also issues related to working with a team of special educators and being the newcomer. These issues included instructional time, behavioral management, and…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Block Scheduling, Elementary Education, Emotional Disturbances
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Kelchtermans, Geert; Ballet, Katrijn – International Journal of Educational Research, 2002
Teachers' professional learning takes place in an organisational context, in which issues of power, influence, and control can play an important part. In this article, we argue that learning how to deal with these inevitable micropolitical aspects of their work lives, constitutes an important dimension in teachers' professional development and…
Descriptors: Professional Development, Teaching Methods, Politics of Education, Teaching Conditions
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Terry, Raymond – English Journal, 1985
Discusses problems new teachers have with the teaching profession, including the low salaries, the adversary relationship between teachers and administrators, overly large classes, and too few instructional materials. (EL)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Beginning Teachers, Educational Improvement, English Instruction
Gelman, Doris; McGoldrick, Neale – Independent School, 1980
Since teachers are a school's most important resource and its largest financial investment, it makes sense to devote time to assuring their success. A school can protect its investment in new teachers by giving them the necessary support from the start through relationships that are both nurturing and evaluative. (Author/AN)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Faculty Workload, Teacher Administrator Relationship, Teacher Behavior
Haberman, Martin – 1981
An unresolved dilemma in teacher education is the organizational dislocation that occurs between the setting in which teachers are educated and those in which they are expected to practice. College students are conditioned to be independent and self-interested, while beginning teachers are expected to conform to and support their school system. In…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Education Majors, Education Work Relationship, Preservice Teacher Education
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