Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Foreword
- Introduction: Burnout and the Teaching Profession
- PART ONE TEACHER BURNOUT: A CRITICAL REVIEW AND SYNTHESIS
- PART TWO TEACHER BURNOUT: PERSPECTIVES AND REMEDIES
- 7 Inconsequentiality – The Key to Understanding Teacher Burnout
- 8 Turning Our Schools into a Healthier Workplace: Bridging Between Professional Self-Efficacy and Professional Demands
- 9 Teaching Career: Between Burnout and Fading Away? Reflections from a Narrative and Biographical Perspective
- 10 A Psychosocial Interpretation of Teacher Stress and Burnout
- 11 Burnout Among Teachers as a Crisis in Psychological Contracts
- 12 Progress in Understanding Teacher Burnout
- 13 Teachers' Moral Purpose: Stress, Vulnerability, and Strength
- 14 Teacher Burnout from a Social-Cognitive Perspective: A Theoretical Position Paper
- 15 Professional Identity, School Reform, and Burnout: Some Reflections on Teacher Burnout
- 16 Conflicting Mindscapes and the Inevitability of Stress in Teaching
- 17 Do Teachers Burn Out More Easily? A Comparison of Teachers with Other Social Professions on Work Stress and Burnout Symptoms
- 18 Teacher Burnout
- PART THREE TEACHER BURNOUT: A RESEARCH AND INTERVENTION AGENDA
- References
- Index
10 - A Psychosocial Interpretation of Teacher Stress and Burnout
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Foreword
- Introduction: Burnout and the Teaching Profession
- PART ONE TEACHER BURNOUT: A CRITICAL REVIEW AND SYNTHESIS
- PART TWO TEACHER BURNOUT: PERSPECTIVES AND REMEDIES
- 7 Inconsequentiality – The Key to Understanding Teacher Burnout
- 8 Turning Our Schools into a Healthier Workplace: Bridging Between Professional Self-Efficacy and Professional Demands
- 9 Teaching Career: Between Burnout and Fading Away? Reflections from a Narrative and Biographical Perspective
- 10 A Psychosocial Interpretation of Teacher Stress and Burnout
- 11 Burnout Among Teachers as a Crisis in Psychological Contracts
- 12 Progress in Understanding Teacher Burnout
- 13 Teachers' Moral Purpose: Stress, Vulnerability, and Strength
- 14 Teacher Burnout from a Social-Cognitive Perspective: A Theoretical Position Paper
- 15 Professional Identity, School Reform, and Burnout: Some Reflections on Teacher Burnout
- 16 Conflicting Mindscapes and the Inevitability of Stress in Teaching
- 17 Do Teachers Burn Out More Easily? A Comparison of Teachers with Other Social Professions on Work Stress and Burnout Symptoms
- 18 Teacher Burnout
- PART THREE TEACHER BURNOUT: A RESEARCH AND INTERVENTION AGENDA
- References
- Index
Summary
Teacher burnout is a very broad concept with several different aspects. It includes stress, professional dissatisfaction, absenteeism, low professional involvement, and the wish to leave the profession. In more severe cases, it may even lead to emotional exhaustion and depression (Esteve, 1992). Also for Rudow (this volume), “burnout is an overlapping concept … it is overlapping as it unites symptoms of (chronic) stress, fatigue, job dissatisfaction, anxiety”. He notes that the terms “burnout” and “stress” (more specifically “distress”) are used as synonyms. Teachers who have professional problems and who cannot cope in an efficient way with those problems experience distress (Pithers and Fogarty, 1995). Burnout results from continuously experiencing distress (not eu-stress). It is always negative. Maslach (1993; this volume) developed a multidimensional model defining “burnout as a psychological syndrome of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and reduced accomplishment.”
Woods (this volume) discusses the introduction of the Education Reform Act of 1988 in the school systems of England and Wales and the subsequent steep increase in the number of teachers applying for early retirement because of health reasons. He uses it as a case study that may tell us a lot about “theoretical and conceptual constructions that have common currency” regarding teachers' stress (and burnout).
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- Chapter
- Information
- Understanding and Preventing Teacher BurnoutA Sourcebook of International Research and Practice, pp. 192 - 201Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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