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Teacher Burnout in the Public Schools

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This unique study is the first large-scale sociological analysis of teacher burnout, linking it with alienation, commitment, and turnover in the educational profession. In the process of doing so, ...
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  • 15 December 1986
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This unique study is the first large-scale sociological analysis of teacher burnout, linking it with alienation, commitment, and turnover in the educational profession. In the process of doing so, Anthony Gary Dworkin uncovers some startling trends that challenge previous assumptions held by public school administrators.

Urban public school districts spend up to several million dollars annually on programs intended to rekindle enthusiasm among their teachers, hoping thereby to reduce the turnover rates. They also assume that enthusiastic teachers will heighten student achievement. Yet data presented in Teacher Burnout in the Public Schools challenge these suppositions.

Dworkin's research shows teacher entrapment, rather than teacher turnover, as the greater problem in education today. Teachers are now more likely to spend their entire working lifetime disliking their careers (and sometimes their students), rather than quitting their jobs, and Dworkin proposes that principals, more than any other school personnel, can do much to break the functional linkage between school-related stress and teacher burnout. The author's findings also indicate that burned-out teachers pose a minimal threat to the achievement of most children, but that they do have an adverse impact on brighter students.

Teacher Burnout in the Public Schools includes an inventory of supported propositions and three levels of policy recommendations. These important policy recommendations suggest substantial organizational changes in the nature of the training of public school teachers in the college educational curriculum, in the teacher employment and deployment practices of school districts, as well as in the administrative style of school principals.

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Price: £25.50
Pages: 241
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series, Educational Leadership
Publication Date: 15 December 1986
ISBN: 9780887063497
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

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Acknowledgments


1. Introduction


2. Burnout, Plans to Quit, and Quitting Behavior


3. Stress, Burnout, and Support Among Those Who Stay in Teaching


4. The Impact of Teachers on Students


5. Conclusion


Appendix A. Operationalizations of Constructs


Appendix B. Percentages, Means and Standard Deviations for Measured Variables from the Teacher and Student Data Sets


Appendix C. Factor Analyses for Scale Construction


Appendix D. Decomposition of Path Models


Appendix E. Commonality Analysis


Appendix F. The Components of a Gain Score: Disaggregation of the Achievement Dependent Variable


Notes


References


Index