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Serkan Gokalp – European Journal of Educational Management, 2024
This study aims to examine the opinions of Religious Culture and Ethics Teachers (RCET) on mobbing in the workplace. The research focuses on RCET's definition of mobbing, the reasons for mobbing, the results of mobbing, and the suggestions of RCET to prevent mobbing. This study used the phenomenological method, one of the qualitative research…
Descriptors: Ethics, Ethical Instruction, Teacher Attitudes, Religious Education
Rubbi Nunan, Julie Shantone – Education and Society, 2023
Students' challenging behaviour is a persisting problem in some primary schools. In South African primary schools, however, students' challenging behaviour is mainly understood as disruptive classroom behaviour. To establish how primary schools experience this phenomenon, interviews were held with twenty-one participants, purposively selected from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems, Elementary School Students
Michalinos Zembylas; Zvi Bekerman – Journal of Professional Capital and Community, 2024
Purpose: In this reflective essay, the authors explore how thinking with the notions of implication and complicity may encourage or hinder efforts to engage teachers in problematizing victim-perpetrator binaries in conflict-affected societies. Design/methodology/approach: This reflective essay draws on lessons learned from the authors' long-time…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Conflict, War, Victims
Fiona Longmuir; Amanda McKay; Beatriz Gallo Cordoba; Kelly-Ann Allen; Michael Phillips – Journal of School Violence, 2025
In the context of teaching workforce shortages, this study examined teachers' perceptions of safety, role satisfaction, and their intent to remain in the profession, in Australia. Findings from two iterations of a survey of a total of 8293 teachers revealed that 20% to 25% of participants felt unsafe in their schools. The results also showed that…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, School Safety, Violence, Work Environment
Rubbi Nunan, Julie Shantone – Journal of Education, 2022
South African primary school teachers struggle curtailing student behaviors, therefore impeding teaching and learning. To understand this phenomenon, 15 primary school teachers were interviewed. Findings reveal that students' negative family dynamics, displaced aggression, and social factors influenced challenging behavior. Social cognitive theory…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems
McMahon, Susan D.; Peist, Eric; Davis, Jacqueline O.; McConnell, Elizabeth; Reaves, Samantha; Reddy, Linda A.; Anderman, Eric M.; Espelage, Dorothy L. – Psychology in the Schools, 2020
Much research has been dedicated to supporting school communities in combating the problem of school violence. However, violence directed toward teachers is under-investigated, and knowledge of how to support teachers is limited. This qualitative study used conventional content analysis to assess teachers' recommendations for preventing and…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Violence
Rios-Gonzalez, Oriol; Puigvert Mallart, Lidia; Sanvicén Torné, Paquita; Aubert Simón, Adriana – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2019
Relevant studies have shown that if aggressive behavior is not stopped in early childhood and persists during elementary school, the risk of continued physical violence and other non-violent forms of delinquency increases during adolescence. Evidence also shows the effectiveness of an intervention that targets aggressive behavior when implemented…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Aggression, Violence, Young Children
Kinkead-Clark, Zoyah – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2020
One factor that put Jamaican children at risk is their exposure to everyday crisis which is defined as an existence where citizens are forced to live in harsh environments resulting from social issues including; crime, violence, economic depression, and social injustice. Guided by the findings which note children's perspectives of schools as…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Young Children, Teacher Attitudes, Early Childhood Teachers
Lucic, Luka – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2021
Educational practices that developed under the conditions of the military siege of Sarajevo during the Bosnian War (1992-1995) are examined. Analyses of interviews with teachers and students are juxtaposed with archival documentation to reveal the mode of educational activities and the structure of the curriculum implemented. By exploring how…
Descriptors: War, Curriculum Implementation, Radio, Programming (Broadcast)
Peist, Eric; McMahon, Susan D.; Davis, Jacqueline O.; Keys, Christopher B. – Journal of School Violence, 2020
Teacher turnover is a significant issue in education that negatively affects students' academic performance and instructional continuity. While multiple factors impact turnover, the effects of violence directed against teachers on turnover have rarely been explored. The current study examines the extent to which (dis)empowerment applies to…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Transfer, Violence, Aggression
Slattery, Lindsey C.; George, Heather Peshak; Kern, Laura – Preventing School Failure, 2019
Bullying is a label or word often considered a subset of aggressive behavior distinguished from other forms of aggression because it occurs repeatedly and involves individuals of unequal power (Frey et al., 2005; Olweus, 1993a). Despite researchers' efforts at establishing a uniform definition, others continue to attribute other meanings to the…
Descriptors: Bullying, Definitions, Power Structure, Violence
Soto Torres, Yesenia – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2020
In line with what is advised by the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, Chile committed to working towards having safe and inclusive environments for students in the national education system. This commitment becomes evident in the policies and legislation promoting inclusion and sanctioning violence in Chilean schools. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inclusion, School Safety, Educational Environment
Petersen, Brenda Berner – ProQuest LLC, 2017
There is a paradox in the profession of nursing. Although nursing is known as the caring profession, evidence demonstrates that nurses do not care well for their own. Literature demonstrates that the phenomenon of horizontal violence (HV) is an international problem in the nursing profession that negatively affects the nurse workplace environment.…
Descriptors: Nursing, Nursing Education, Aggression, Work Environment
Moon, Byongook; McCluskey, John – Journal of School Violence, 2020
Limited empirical findings suggest that teacher victimization at school is highly prevalent, with detrimental negative impacts on victimized teachers. Given the scarce body of literature on teacher victimization, further research is necessary to investigate its extent, predictors, and negative consequences. The present research, using a…
Descriptors: Violence, Aggression, Victims, Middle School Teachers
Bickmore, Kathy; Kishani Farahani, Najme – Journal on Education in Emergencies, 2022
Building durable peace through education requires addressing the gender ideologies and hierarchies that encourage both direct physical aggression and indirect harm through marginalization and exploitation. Although formal education systems are shaped by gendered patterns of social conflict, enmity, and inequity, schools can help young people to…
Descriptors: Peace, Teaching Methods, Sustainability, Public Schools