6533b858fe1ef96bd12b65ab

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Is individual- and school-level teacher burnout reduced by proactive strategies?

Esko LeskinenKaisa HaverinenJanne PietarinenKirsi PyhältöKirsi PyhältöKirsi PyhältöTiina Soini

subject

self-regulationco-regulationteacher burnout515 Psychologyhealth care facilities manpower and serviceseducationitsesääntelyBurnoutuupumusEducationDevelopmental psychologylaw.inventionStress (mechanics)law0502 economics and businessDevelopmental and Educational PsychologystressinhallintaSchool levelproactive strategiesmultilevel modelinghealth care economics and organizations05 social sciencesMultilevel model050301 educationtyöyhteisötCrossover effectsstressiopettajatTransmission (mechanics)ennaltaehkäisy516 Educational sciencesPsychology0503 educationpsychological phenomena and processes050203 business & management

description

There is provisional evidence that burnout may be contagious within professional communities via the crossover effect, referring to an inter-individual transmission of stress or strain. However, our understanding of effective means for tackling stressors is scarce. We tested a two-level path model to explore the interrelation between teachers’ proactive self- and co-regulative strategies and experienced burnout. The study sample comprised 1531 Finnish in-service teachers from 75 schools. The results showed that burnout symptoms varied both between individual teachers and between professional communities. Self- and co-regulative strategies serve partly different functions in regulating teacher burnout symptoms. publishedVersion Peer reviewed

10.1080/21683603.2021.1942344http://hdl.handle.net/10138/340816