Causes of Job Dissatisfaction among Teachers [microform] / Robert Knoop.

Job dissatisfaction may manifest itself in frustration for the teacher and defense mechanisms for the employer. Previous research suggests that unfulfilled needs, goals, and value expectations, as well as the lack of achievement of outcomes, account for job dissatisfaction. Other variables include d...

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Online Access: Request ERIC Document
Main Author: Knoop, Robert
Format: Microfilm Book
Language:English
Published: [Place of publication not identified] : Distributed by ERIC Clearinghouse, 1987.
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Summary:Job dissatisfaction may manifest itself in frustration for the teacher and defense mechanisms for the employer. Previous research suggests that unfulfilled needs, goals, and value expectations, as well as the lack of achievement of outcomes, account for job dissatisfaction. Other variables include demography, disillusionment with life, lack of participation in decision-making, and absence of considerate leader behavior. Due to a plethora of hypotheses, variables, specific dimensions, and measuring instruments, research offers only a limited comprehension of job dissatisfaction. In a recent survey, questionnaires completed by 894 elementary and 971 secondary school teachers from 17 Ontario school boards revealed that few respondents were dissatisfied; demography was generally insignificant; dissatisfaction was associated with external control, low self-esteem, an absence of humanistic work values, disappointment in life, and an absence of particular job characteristics; alienation from teaching and lack of job motivation were the most powerful predictors; and teachers wished instruction to be more challenging. To make teaching more challenging, differentiated levels of teachers could be introduced; to avoid alienation and advance motivation, differentiated staffing could be combined with alternant leadership; and, to prevent excessive centralization, private schools could be encouraged. Attached are 64 references and 4 tables. (RG)
Item Description:ERIC Note: Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Society for Studies in Education (Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, May 31-June 3, 1987).
ERIC Document Number: ED284335.
Physical Description:24 pages.
Audience:Practitioners.
Researchers.