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Teacher Burnout Literature Table

EDUCATION ADMINISTRATION

Education Administration: Teacher Burnout- Literature Table and Reference List

Reference

1. Carroll et al., 2021

2. Herman, Hickmon-Rosa & Reinke, 2018

3. Jacobson, 2016

Type (qual, quant, theoretical, peer-reviewed, book, dissertation)

Quantitative research (peer-review article)

Quantitative research (peer-review article)

A qualitative study (dissertation)

Aim or scope of the study

To assess the downstream effects of teachers burnout along with the effectiveness of stress-reduction interventions and improvement in student self-reported outcomes

To explore the relationship between teachers stress, burnout, self-efficacy, and coping along with its implications on student outcomes in terms of managing disruptive behaviors and academic achievement

To study teachers burnout and its implications in an urban high school in the North-Eastern United States

Setting and participants

17 Teachers and their 226 students participated in the study from Brisbane, Australia. Questionnaires were completed at the administering institution.

One hundred twenty-one teachers and 1817 students from kindergarten to fourth grade were included in nine urban Midwestern elementary school districts.

Five high-school teachers who experienced burnout

Theoretical or conceptual framework

Theoretical framework as it aimed to explore the relationship between teachers stress and its implications on the student outcomes via supporting the theory of the research study.

The conceptual framework was used as variables were defined for which relationship was to be investigated

Conceptual framework

Main results or conclusions

The teachers and the students gave positive intervention scores and mentioned reducing stress and better task orientation.

Most teachers fell into the class where they experienced burnout and stress, and detected low coping mechanisms. Physical and psychological effects on the job performance were indicated that be related to worse student outcomes, particularly in math achievement, increased disrupted behaviors, and low adaption in behaviors.

The findings cited that teachers burnout could stem from educational mandates, disciplines issues in the class, while its effects could be substantial in the form of implications for educational stakeholders

Implications for research or practice

Stress-reduction techniques could improve teachers performance, reduce attrition, and enhance student well-being and support.

Teacher screening could help identify those who need help based on stress, burnout, and coping factors. Positive behavior interventions and support (PBIS) is a critical policy requiring such teachers' support to mitigate student risk of low academic achievements.

Positive social change is essential that could lead to the elimination of stress factors for the teachers so that high motivation is induced in teachers for high-quality delivery of instruction and better student outcomes

Useful quote

A broad range of factors from multiple domains can contribute to the development of teacher stress including systematic, cultural, relational and intrapersonal.

Teachers with low self-efficacy or negative beliefs about their ability to teach students manage their behavior, exhibit less effective teaching practices.

Teacher burnout and attrition affect districts, states, and students achievement in two ways: one is academic and the other is financial.

Reference

4. Weibenfels, Klopp & Perels, 2022

5. Wang, 2022

6. Sarikaya, 2021

Type (qual, quant, theoretical, peer-reviewed, book, dissertation)

Quantitative...

Most evidently for administration, teacher trainers, and counselors for developing language systems.

To examine the music teachers burnout during Covid-19 related to some selected variables and suggest implications based on those variables.

Setting and participants

92 teachers were selected from primary and secondary schools working in Southwestern Germany. An online questionnaire was to be filled out twice during the pandemic (from 2019 to 2020)

None

Participants included 215 music teachers in Konya, Aksaray, Nigde, Nevsehir, and Karaman provinces. Participation was online in a survey format.

Theoretical or conceptual framework

Theoretical

Conceptual foundation in the form of literature review

Conceptual

Main results or conclusions

Feelings of inefficacy existed during the teachers burnut stage in Covid 19; emotional exhaustion was surely experienced not due to work overload but from emotional support that students required from the teacher during online classes, leading to less self-accomplishment and TSE.

The findings improved knowledge about teachers burnout, its effect on teacher apprehension, and implications for school administrators for reducing this stress. Better personalization of teachers would help improve learner outcomes and would be in the position to meet...

…transition from face-to-face learning to the online model has certainly shaped how teachers interact with their students, which has created a shift in burnout levels. It can cause demotivation, less sense of accomplishment, low-efficiency levels, greater dissatisfaction, and decreased optimism; that should be a matter of concern for institutes like UNED so that tutors could be supported during the evolution of extreme digitization of education.

School administration should think of ways to enhance teachers' professional identity for better job satisfaction and relatively lesser burnout, especially when practicality in Covid 19 has imposed major adjustments in educational models.

A need for self-reflection and likely future changes in collaborative support for the teachers is imperative for reducing burnout. Leadership practices need to re-invent ways in which resources should be provided to teachers on campuses to reduce job stressors and attrition.

Useful quote

One of the studies in literature review section stated that the primary reasons for burnout are workplace factors rather than the personal characteristics of employees leading to the fact that higher education system should be inspected deeply for tutor burnout.

Even studies have shown that subjects with a history of childhood abuse are particularly at risk of burnout, depression, and suicide.

Principals were found to shape their leadership approach primarily by school context rather than individual teacher need.

Reference

10. Mulyani et al., 2021

Type (qual, quant, theoretical, peer-reviewed, book, dissertation)

Quantitative study (peer-reviewed article)

Aim or scope of the study

To evaluate whether improvements in working conditions, work-life balance, and students classroom behaviors could reduce teachers burnout in special schools with mediating effect of emotional regulation techniques.

Setting and participants

323 teacher participants were taken from special schools in Punjab, Pakistan. Online questionnaires were sent and received from the respondents.

Theoretical or conceptual framework

Conceptual

Main results or conclusions

The results showed that all three variables are significantly related to reducing job burnout with a greater positive impact of the emotional regulation technique.

Implications for research or practice

Development of emotional skills, training, and coping strategies is emphasized for the future reduction of burnout among special school teachers. Emotional competencies are as essential as teaching skills that should be noted…

Sources used in this document:

References


Carroll, A., York, A., Fynes-Clinton, S., Sanders-O’Connor, E., Flynn, L., Bower, J.M., Forest & Ziaei, M. (2021). The downstream effects of teachers’ well-being programs: Improvements in teachers’ stress, cognition, and well-being benefit their students. Frontiers in Psychology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.689628


Chen, H., Liu, F., Pang, L., Liu, F., Fang, T., Wen, Y., Chen, S., Xie, Z., Zhang, X., Zhao, Y. & Gu, X. (2020). Are you tired of working amid the pandemic? The role of professional identity and job satisfaction against job burnout. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(24). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17249188


Herman, K.C., Hickmon-Rosa, J. & Reinke, W.M. (2018). Empirically derived profiles of teacher stress, burnout, self-efficacy, and coping and associated student outcomes. Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 20(2), 90-100. https://doi.org/10.1177/1098300717732066


Jacobson, D.A. (2016). Causes and effects of teacher burnout [Doctoral dissertation, Walden University]. Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3938&context=dissertations


Kaiser, F.J. & Thompson, R. (2021). Slowing the burn: Principal leadership supports to reduce attrition. School Leadership Review, 16(1). Available at: https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1183&context=slr


Mulyani, S., Salameh, A.A., Komariah, A., Timoshin, A., Hashim, N.A.A.N., Fauziah, R.S.P., Mulyaningsih, M., Ahmad, I. & Mohy ul din, S. (2021). Emotional regulation as a remedy for teacher burnout in special schools: Evaluating school climate, teachers’ work-life balance, and children behavior. Frontiers in Psychology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.655850


Parte, L. & Herrador-Alcaide, T. (2021). Teaching disruption by Covid-19: Burnout, isolation, and sense of belonging in accounting tutors in e-learning and b-learning. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(19), 10339. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph181910339


Sarikaya, M. (2021). An investigation of the relationship between Covid-19 anxiety and burnout among music teachers. International Journal on Social and Education Sciences, 3(4), 789-806. https://doi.org/10.46328/ijonses.274


Wang, Z. (2022). The effect of EFL teacher apprehension and teacher burnout on learners’ academic achievement. Frontiers in Psychology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.839452


Weibenfels, M., Klopp, E. & Perels, F. (2022). Changes in teacher burnout and self-efficacy during the Covid-19 pandemic: Interrelations and e-learning variables related to change. Frontiers in Education, 6. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2021.736992

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