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Bingöl, Hülya – Cypriot Journal of Educational Sciences, 2020
The aim of this research is to examine the organizational commitment perceptions of academics who teach in the sports fields. Population of the research is composed of academics who teach in the sports fields as part of the academic staff. The research group consists of 408 academics who work in the field of sports sciences. In the research, a…
Descriptors: Athletics, Teacher Persistence, Teacher Attitudes, Academic Rank (Professional)
Julia Rabe – ProQuest LLC, 2020
The attrition of teachers working in mainstream public schools is a concerning trend. While some research on attrition with teachers in general or special education teachers is present, few studies exist within the field of Deaf education that explore the teacher attrition in mainstream schools and none are found that utilized a qualitative…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Deafness, Students with Disabilities, Mainstreaming
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Wesley Edwards – Urban Education, 2024
Research suggests that work environments are associated with turnover patterns for teachers of Color. This study investigates variation in work environments using longitudinal administrative data from 20 large urban and suburban K-12 school districts. Results indicate that teachers of Color are more often employed in "hard-to-staff" work…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Suburban Schools, African American Teachers, Minority Group Teachers
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Karen Peel; Nick Kelly; Patrick A. Danaher – Issues in Educational Research, 2024
Teachers' motivation and the conditions that support their resilience to sustain motivation in the profession impact on their decision-making and outcomes for students. Yet a less commonly explored issue in educational research is the interdependence of the contextual influences on being a teacher and those teachers' thoughts and behaviours. This…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Persistence, Resilience (Psychology), Attribution Theory
Theresa Gouveia – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Much of the research on special education teachers has focused on compassion fatigue, burnout and secondary traumatic stress. However, few studies have been conducted to understand special education teachers' perspective on both compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction. Fewer still have utilized photo-elicitation as part of the data…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Altruism, Teacher Burnout
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LaRon A. Scott; Christine Powell; Lauren Bruno; Christopher J. Cormier; Kendra Hall; Katherine Brendli; Joshua P. Taylor – Excelsior: Leadership in Teaching and Learning, 2023
We examined reasons special educators are motivated to persist in the profession despite challenges that often lead to attrition for this group. Participants were 21 special education teachers with six or more years of teaching experience across multiple grade levels. Data were collected via the Zoom virtual meeting platform with four focus…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Teacher Persistence, Barriers, Faculty Mobility
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Kaniuka, Ted; Chitiga, Miriam – International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership, 2022
This study approaches the idea of teachers' commitment to stay at their job by considering their perceptions of efforts by leadership to support working conditions in schools. Data from 85,000 teachers from the 2016 school year in North Carolina were used in the mediation analysis. Results show that administrative effort had a direct effect on…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Teaching Experience, Teacher Attitudes, Leadership
Jules-Cejour, Holguine – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Substantial teacher turnover has been on a steady incline for over a decade. Studies show that 44% of teachers quit the profession within 5 years of teaching. Most of this loss is taking place in urban districts, where teacher attrition can have the greatest impact on school districts' outcomes. This costly issue is a significant factor disrupting…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility, School Districts, Urban Schools
Christina M. Ruoss – ProQuest LLC, 2022
School districts across the United States are facing a teacher shortage that has the potential to become a national crisis. While teacher attrition rates prior to the COVID-19 pandemic were high, the pandemic and its aftermath have exacerbated the problem. The number of teachers leaving the profession continues to increase at an alarming rate.…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Labor Turnover, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Jessica McConnell – NECTFL Review, 2024
This study addressed the problem of a continuing loss of world language (WL) teachers in the United States. The author analyzed semi-structured interviews with five current and former high school WL teachers to investigate their perspectives on factors that may predict WL teacher attrition and retention. Findings identified elements related to…
Descriptors: Official Languages, Language Usage, Second Language Instruction, Language Teachers
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Jody-Ann Robinson; Patricia Briscoe – Journal of Teaching and Learning, 2024
The beginning years of a teacher's career can be an overwhelming experience, and combined with being in an isolated, fly-in community, particularly during a pandemic, can be debilitating. This qualitative research is aimed to support and account for the story of a Black Afro-Caribbean, early career teacher (ECT) in a Northern Ontario First Nation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Canada Natives, Blacks, Minority Group Teachers
Santoro, Doris A. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2020
When teachers talk about leaving the profession, they are commonly described as "burnt out." But for many, argues Doris Santoro, that's not the real story. In truth, most teachers enter teaching because they want to pursue moral commitments to the well-being of their students, colleagues, and communities. In-depth interviews with…
Descriptors: Teacher Burnout, Teaching Conditions, Teacher Attitudes, Moral Values
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Bavli, Bunyamin; Kortel, Özge – Pastoral Care in Education, 2023
The study aims to shed light on how Turkish teachers perceive 'teacher resilience' in the shadow of the COVID-19 Outbreak by exploring their experiences. Phenomenological design was adopted in the study and maximum variation sampling was employed in selection of participants who consisted of 15 teachers with different educational backgrounds. Data…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Resilience (Psychology), COVID-19, Pandemics
Van Overschelde, James P.; Wiggins, Afi Y. – Texas Education Research Center, 2017
Teaching does not happen in a vacuum. Teachers teach and students learn within a school. The environment within that school can be either conducive to teaching "and" learning or detrimental to both. The school's teaching and learning environment includes, for example, the instructional expertise and leadership available to teachers, the…
Descriptors: Teaching Conditions, Teacher Surveys, Validity, Reliability
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Burke, Paul F.; Buchanan, John – Australian Journal of Education, 2022
Staffing rural and regional schools remains an intractable problem. This study identifies effective incentives for attracting teachers to difficult-to-staff rural and remote schools in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. Compared to their urban counterparts, students in these schools are disadvantaged by teacher staff shortages, inexperience and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural Schools, Regional Schools, Teacher Shortage
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