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Tracy L. Gross – ProQuest LLC, 2020
Teacher attrition is a main contributor to teacher shortages; providing effective professional development leading to increases in self-efficacy, reflective capacity, and job satisfaction may support teacher retention. Effective professional development, self-efficacy, reflective practice, and job satisfaction are all directly related to teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Self Efficacy, Reflection, Job Satisfaction
Kevin R. Easley – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic required schools to be more flexible in relation to their selection of an instructional modality, adopting virtual or hybrid schedules for instruction if face-to-face instruction was not possible (Rogers & Ishimoto, 2020). This change led to educators conducting classrooms virtually and interacting with students and…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Job Satisfaction, COVID-19, Pandemics
Hasselquist, Laura; Herndon, Kevin; Kitchel, Tracy – Journal of Agricultural Education, 2017
This study explored first and second year agriculture teachers' job satisfaction and teacher selfefficacy through their perceived levels of school culture support. Prior research indicated one possible contributor to poor teacher retention is a lack of belonging teachers feel to their schools. Data were collected from beginning teachers in three…
Descriptors: School Culture, Beginning Teachers, Agricultural Education, Job Satisfaction
Henderson, Samantha Lou – ProQuest LLC, 2014
In this study, the factors that influence special education teachers to remain in their profession for at least five years were identified and analyzed. The study involved a mixed-methods design including a survey and interviews with experienced special educators. The survey items and their categorizations as relational support or organizational…
Descriptors: Special Education, Teacher Persistence, Special Education Teachers, Mixed Methods Research
Engelhart, Elizabeth F. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
High performing schools with exceptional leaders are needed today in America. School leaders are expected to come to the job equipped with the ability to address curriculum issues, face dire budget constraints, and turn around school culture and climate. Financially, schools are suffering from the cost of teacher turnover. Students are suffering…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Teacher Persistence, Elementary School Teachers, Elementary Schools
Perrachione, Beverly A.; Rosser, Vicki J.; Petersen, George J. – Professional Educator, 2008
The purpose of this study was to identify intrinsic and extrinsic variables that influence teacher job satisfaction and retention. A survey was sent to 300 randomly selected Missouri public elementary school teachers in grades K-5 having 5 or more years of teaching experience. The results from 201 respondents suggest that three intrinsic…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Multiple Regression Analysis, Teaching Experience, Predictor Variables
Silman, Timothy; Glazerman, Steven – Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., 2009
This report set out to profile the Missouri Career Ladder program by delving beneath the surface and comparing how the program works in practice (based on stakeholder accounts) with how it works in theory (based on published statutes and regulations). The authors found that in many respects the program operates as one might expect. Districts…
Descriptors: School Activities, Incentives, Focus Groups, Academic Achievement

Peterson, Norman K.; Custer, Rodney L. – Journal of Technology Studies, 1994
Comparison of 37 health occupations and 80 trade and industrial teachers' Myers Briggs types to those of a population of 1,438 other teachers indicated a high number of Sensing types teaching vocational subjects. Intuitive types left teaching at higher rates than Sensing types; Intuitive-Thinking types were even more likely to leave. (SK)
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Job Satisfaction, Personality Traits, Secondary Education