1 / 19

For the love of teaching: Commitment of beginning secondary teachers in Seychelles

For the love of teaching: Commitment of beginning secondary teachers in Seychelles. Authors: Odile de Comarmond Dr Jane Abbiss Dr Susan Lovett University of Canterbury NZARE Conference – 28 th – 30 th November 2012 University of Waikato

jabir
Télécharger la présentation

For the love of teaching: Commitment of beginning secondary teachers in Seychelles

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. For the love of teaching: Commitment of beginning secondary teachers in Seychelles Authors: Odile de Comarmond Dr Jane Abbiss Dr Susan Lovett University of Canterbury NZARE Conference – 28th – 30th November 2012 University of Waikato Hamilton, New Zealand

  2. How committed are beginning teachers in Seychelles? • Brief outline of the context of the study • Aim and Significance • Methodology • Key findings

  3. Location of seychelles

  4. Why interest in teacher commitment in seychelles? • Fewer people entering the teaching profession • Observed challenges in retention of teachers • Teacher voice about their commitment in the profession and their trajectories • Explore possible link between TC and performance, satisfaction and retention

  5. Defining teacher commitment • commitment’- “ a strong belief that something is good and you should support it”( Macmillan English Dictionary, 2007) • ‘Teacher commitment’- (Ebmeier and Nicklaus, 1999) • part of a teacher’s affective or emotional reaction to their experience in a school setting and the level of personal investment to a particular school or group of pupils.

  6. Gap in literature • Recent study on teachers professional lives by Day et al., (2007) revealed that teachers’ commitment fluctuate over the years based on the personal and contextual circumstances; • My study is built on previous literature, but in a different context–that of a developing country

  7. Current paper • Part of a larger study on commitment of secondary teachers across career stages • Focus on Newly Qualified Teachers, one of the case studies of the main study • Interest in beginning teachers as a concern for both the local context and worldwide

  8. Methodology • Qualitative study with two main approaches: case study and phenomenography; • Phenomenography is an approach to explore “variations in experiences and perceptions of a phenomenon” (Marton, 1981) and organise the findings in categories of description. • Individual interviews have been the main data gathering tool

  9. Participants 7 NQTs (5 were still in the system and 2 had left)

  10. Key findings 1: Motivation to teach • Passion for the profession “I joined for the love of teaching-this is the job of my dream” (Marcus) • Inspired by others “My mother is a teacher, so I was inspired by her” (John) • Shortage of teachers in the country “I knew there was a shortage of teachers in the country” (Lise) • Love for children “I really love children” (Mandy)

  11. Key findings 1 cont... • Desire to make a difference “I really wanted to make a difference in the lives of students” (Marcus) • New life style “Now that I have a child, teaching suits my new life style” (Lise) • Career advancement “Teaching opened up a new career opportunity for me” (Teddy) • Opportunity for further training “I was looking forward to go overseas for further training” (Lise) • School holidays “I like the holidays as I can spend time with my child” (Lise)

  12. Key Findings 2: Conceptions of teacher commitment Personal spectrum Teacher commitment Professional spectrum

  13. Key findings 3: Push/Pull Factors • Stayer: 1 teacher (John)- “I will remain until I can no longer work. This is how I am feeling right now.” (John) • Undecided- 1 teacher (Teddy) “I am still learning the job, because teacher education only gives you the basic” (Teddy) • Planning to leave: 3 teachers (Marcus, Lise and Mandy) “If I get a job tomorrow I will go.” (Marcus) “I am planning to leave when I fulfil my bonding agreement” (Lise) “I am planning to move to private schools” (Mandy) • Left: 2 teachers (Joel and Rana) “The leadership of the school was not supportive...” (Rana) “The workload was too much...” (Joel)

  14. Key findings 3 cont...: Factors influencing commitment and trajectories

  15. What do the findings show? • Motivation to teach→understandings of TC↔teachers’ professional lives • Complexity of TC: Not just personal traits, but intersection of personal values, attributes, and social, and structural systems • Majority planning to leave • +Personal values and attributes, support • -Reality shock and disillusion dominant • -Students’ behaviour and attitude

  16. What next? • To address disillusion and reality shock ─ include personal identities of teachers in ITE • Supporting NQTs (induction, mentoring) • Students’ behaviour: NQTs need support from school leadership and the system • Workload→frustration, stress and burnout

  17. What next? • Build on the core values and personalities of teachers • But this alone is not sufficient-need to provide the environment that will nurture these values to develop the professional identities and the sense of efficacy of these teachers • Concerted effort (policy, school leaders and teachers) to find ways to sustain commitment of these teachers and retain them in the profession

  18. THANK YOU QUESTIONS/SUGGESTIONS?

  19. Some references • Day, C., Sammons, P., Stobart, G., Kington, A., & Gu, Q. (2007). Teachers matter: Connecting work, lives and effectiveness. New York: Open University Press. • Marton, F. (1986). Phenomenography-A research approach to investigating different understandings of reality. Journal of Thought, 21(3), 28-49. • Ingersoll, R. M., & Smith, T. M. (2003). The wrong solution to teacher shortages. Educational Leadership, 60(8), 30-33. • Ebmeier, H., & Nicklaus, J. (1999). The impact of peer and principal collaborative supervision on teachers' trust, commitment. Journal of Curriculum & Supervision, 14(4), 351. • Cameron, M., Baker, R., & Lovett, S. (2006). Teachers of promise: Getting started in teaching. Wellington: New Zealand Council for Educational Research.

More Related