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Showing all 15 results Save | Export
Becca Franssen; Josh Freeman; Opeoluwa Aiyenitaju; Bola Babajide; Mercy Denedo; Steven Kator Iorfa; Adegboyega Oyedijo – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2024
In recent years the UK higher education sector has made great progress increasing the representation of Black academics, but more work is needed so every early-career academic has equal opportunity to develop their career. In this report, Dr. Becca Franssen and colleagues draw on survey results and in-depth interviews to paint a picture of the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, African American Teachers, Teacher Promotion, Teacher Persistence
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Green, Francis – Oxford Review of Education, 2021
I analyse trends in teachers' job quality in Britain, using the framework of the European Foundation for Living and Working Conditions, with data from the British Skills and Employment Survey. The issue of increasing concern is not work hours, which have remained long but stable; rather, teachers are working considerably more intensively than in…
Descriptors: Trend Analysis, Teaching Conditions, Work Environment, Teacher Attitudes
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King, Virginia; Roed, Jannie; Wilson, Louise – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2018
The sociologist, Max Weber (1864-1920), suggested that few could withstand the frustrations of academic life. As the strategic management of human resources begins to differentiate higher education institutions (HEIs) in league tables, the costs of voluntary staff turnover (attrition) become more significant. In this paper, we consider links…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, College Faculty, Higher Education, Beginning Teacher Induction
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Oldfield, Jeremy; Ainsworth, Steph – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2022
The teacher retention crisis has led to a strong discourse around the need for teachers to 'build their resilience', which places the responsibility for coping at the feet of the individual teacher. Contemporary research, however, supports a social-ecological approach, which takes account of environmental influences within the resilience process.…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Teacher Persistence, Risk, Context Effect
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Gillard, Duncan; Wright, David; McNally, Aoife; Flaxman, Paul E.; McIntosh, Ross; Honey, Kyla – Educational Psychology in Practice, 2021
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) has evolved a considerable evidence-base in recent years. One area wherein the model has demonstrated strong empirical support is through its application within the workplace. However, little empirical work has been carried out within the educational workforce and even less has been done with school leaders…
Descriptors: Well Being, Therapy, Program Descriptions, Measures (Individuals)
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Regan, Julie-Anne; Graham, Carroll – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2018
As part of a larger study, professional staff from two universities, Australian and British, were asked how they entered into a higher education career and what factors kept them in that career. Many participants reported that they found themselves in professional services almost by accident, or by a fortunate combination of circumstances.…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Career Development, Professional Services, College Faculty
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Bates, Elizabeth A.; Kaye, Linda K.; Blewitt, John – Education Sciences, 2014
The introduction of the new tuition fee regime in the UK academic session 2012-2013 has resulted in concerns in the Higher Education (HE) community that students' expectations may become unmanageable. Previous research has explored the expectations and experiences of undergraduate psychology students; the current study extended this by considering…
Descriptors: Tuition, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Experience
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Fuller, C.; Goodwyn, A.; Francis-Brophy, E. – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2013
The teaching profession continues to struggle with defining itself in relation to other professions. Even though public opinion positions teachers second only to doctors and nurses in terms of their professional status and prestige research in the UK suggests that teachers still believe that they have much lower status than other professions. With…
Descriptors: Teaching Skills, Professional Identity, Social Status, Foreign Countries
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McIntyre, Joanna – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2010
Within the UK there are grave concerns about retention and attrition rates within the teaching profession, particularly in challenging schools. These are compounded by worries about the gap that will be left as long-serving teachers reach retirement age. This article is about the working lives of long-serving teachers in three high-poverty urban…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Retirement, Foreign Countries
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Dadley, E. M.; Edwards, B. – British Journal of Religious Education, 2007
This article reports on an investigation into the retention of secondary religious education teachers trained at one institution over a ten-year period. The initial hypothesis was that many of these teachers would no longer be teaching, or would no longer be teaching religious education. However, the authors found that a high percentage of…
Descriptors: Investigations, Religious Education, Teacher Persistence, Secondary School Teachers
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Maylor, Uvanney – Journal of Education Policy, 2009
Growing concerns about the experience and achievement of Black pupils (especially Black males) underpin calls for more Black people to serve as teacher and lay mentor role models in schools. Calls for increased numbers of Black teacher role models assume firstly, that Black teachers regard themselves as role models and want to perform such a role…
Descriptors: Blacks, Role Models, Teacher Role, Males
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Baron, Helen – Teacher Development, 2000
Argues that commitment to teaching remains strong, even as the conditions for teaching worsen, highlighting a small-scale study of the attitudes of college faculty from two British institutions of higher education. Data from faculty interviews indicated that though both groups had negative responses to many aspects of their jobs, they were firmly…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Job Satisfaction
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Little, Judith Warren; Bartlett, Lora – Review of Research in Education, 2010
In this chapter, the authors examine developments in the teacher workforce and in the occupation of teaching across recent generations. They take their point of departure from the perspective of prevailing policy discourse on enduring problems of educational equity, asking not only how teaching has evolved in recent decades but more specifically…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Outcomes of Education, Educational Opportunities, Teaching Methods
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Armour, Kathleen M.; Yelling, Martin R. – Sport, Education and Society, 2004
Continuing Professional Development (CPD) is now a cornerstone of education policy in the UK and elsewhere. If policy aspirations translate successfully into practice, then (funded) CPD opportunities will abound and teachers will be 'developed' in a logical and structured way from the moment they enter the profession until retirement. As a result…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Teacher Persistence, Physical Education Teachers, Professional Continuing Education
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Hammond, Michael – Technology, Pedagogy and Education, 2004
This article reports on teaching information and communication technology (ICT) as a subject. It arises out of research carried out with ICT trainee teachers during their initial training and their first years of teaching. The backgrounds of four cohorts of new ICT teachers are described along with levels of retention in teaching. The associations…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Computer Science Education, Secondary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers