Literature DB >> 2344432

Psychological and biographical differences between secondary school teachers experiencing high and low levels of burnout.

C M Pierce1, G N Molloy.   

Abstract

A total of 750 teachers from 16 government and non-government schools from areas of contrasted socio-economic status (SES) responded to a questionnaire designed to investigate associations between selected aspects of burnout among teachers working in secondary schools in Victoria, Australia. By comparing high and low burnout groups on biographic, psychological and work pattern variables, differences between teachers experiencing high and low levels of burnout were identified. Multiple regression analyses assessed the relative importance of these variables in accounting for the variance in each of the three burnout subscales. School type was related to perceptions of stress and burnout. Higher levels of burnout were associated with poorer physical health, higher rates of absenteeism, lower self-confidence and more frequent use of regressive coping strategies. Teachers classified as experiencing high levels of burnout attributed most of the stress in their lives to teaching and reported low levels of career commitment and satisfaction. Further, teachers who recorded high levels of burnout were characterised by lower levels of the personality disposition of hardiness, lower levels of social support, higher levels of role stress and more custodial pupil control ideologies than their low-burnout counterparts. Psychological variables were found to be more significant predictors of burnout than biographical variables.

Mesh:

Year:  1990        PMID: 2344432     DOI: 10.1111/j.2044-8279.1990.tb00920.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Educ Psychol        ISSN: 0007-0998


  5 in total

1.  Parameters influencing health variables in a sample of 949 German teachers.

Authors:  Thomas Unterbrink; Linda Zimmermann; Ruth Pfeifer; Michael Wirsching; Elmar Brähler; Joachim Bauer
Journal:  Int Arch Occup Environ Health       Date:  2008-06-06       Impact factor: 3.015

2.  Development of a measure of work-related distress: Psychometric properties.

Authors:  J V Flowers; C D Booraem; B Schwartz
Journal:  J Occup Rehabil       Date:  1992-09

3.  Burnout hazard in teachers results of a clinical-psychological intervention study.

Authors:  Ralf Wegner; Peter Berger; Bernd Poschadel; Ulf Manuwald; Xaver Baur
Journal:  J Occup Med Toxicol       Date:  2011-12-22       Impact factor: 2.646

4.  Burnout as a predictor of self-reported sickness absence among human service workers: prospective findings from three year follow up of the PUMA study.

Authors:  M Borritz; R Rugulies; K B Christensen; E Villadsen; T S Kristensen
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2006-02       Impact factor: 4.402

5.  Burnout syndrome in the Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Unit.

Authors:  Stelian Atila Balan; Şerban Ion Bubenek-Turconi; Gabriela Droc; Elena Marinescu; Elisabeta Nita; Mihaela Camelia Popa; Dana Popescu-Spineni; Dana Tomescu
Journal:  Rom J Anaesth Intensive Care       Date:  2019-04
  5 in total

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