Learned Resourcefulness and Burnout Levels of English Teachers
The aim of this study was to examine the relationships between some individual characteristics, learned resourcefulness and burn out on the one hand and the relationships between burn out and learned resourcefulness on the other. The participants in this research included 163 English teachers teach...
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doaj-505c509f829a49b9904b0454244f69772021-06-14T19:19:24ZengERPAInternational Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies 2148-93782016-01-0131Learned Resourcefulness and Burnout Levels of English TeachersGülten Genç0İnönü UniversityThe aim of this study was to examine the relationships between some individual characteristics, learned resourcefulness and burn out on the one hand and the relationships between burn out and learned resourcefulness on the other. The participants in this research included 163 English teachers teaching in the schools located in Malatya. The participants were asked to anonymously fill out a questionnaire involving three parts which respectively investigated their background, burnout level and learned resourcefulness (Rosenbaum’s Learned Resourcefulness Scale and Maslach Burnout Inventory). The findings indicated that more than half of the teachers possess moderately high level of learned resourcefulness and they are experiencing burnout at moderate level in three aspects of MBI. In addition, the analysis suggested an inverse relationship between learned resourcefulness and the three burnout subscales: as learned resourcefulness increases, emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and lack of personal accomplishment decrease. Furthermore; the independent variables (age, gender, and marital status) were not found to be significant in learned resourcefulness and any of the burnout dimensions. “The school type” is the only variable which was found to be significant in the three burnout sub-dimensions. Results are discussed in the light of current literature and suggestions were provided. http://www.ojsijpes.com/index.php/ijpes/article/view/16 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Gülten Genç |
spellingShingle |
Gülten Genç Learned Resourcefulness and Burnout Levels of English Teachers International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies |
author_facet |
Gülten Genç |
author_sort |
Gülten Genç |
title |
Learned Resourcefulness and Burnout Levels of English Teachers |
title_short |
Learned Resourcefulness and Burnout Levels of English Teachers |
title_full |
Learned Resourcefulness and Burnout Levels of English Teachers |
title_fullStr |
Learned Resourcefulness and Burnout Levels of English Teachers |
title_full_unstemmed |
Learned Resourcefulness and Burnout Levels of English Teachers |
title_sort |
learned resourcefulness and burnout levels of english teachers |
publisher |
ERPA |
series |
International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies |
issn |
2148-9378 |
publishDate |
2016-01-01 |
description |
The aim of this study was to examine the relationships between some individual characteristics, learned resourcefulness and burn out on the one hand and the relationships between burn out and learned resourcefulness on the other. The participants in this research included 163 English teachers teaching in the schools located in Malatya. The participants were asked to anonymously fill out a questionnaire involving three parts which respectively investigated their background, burnout level and learned resourcefulness (Rosenbaum’s Learned Resourcefulness Scale and Maslach Burnout Inventory). The findings indicated that more than half of the teachers possess moderately high level of learned resourcefulness and they are experiencing burnout at moderate level in three aspects of MBI. In addition, the analysis suggested an inverse relationship between learned resourcefulness and the three burnout subscales: as learned resourcefulness increases, emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and lack of personal accomplishment decrease. Furthermore; the independent variables (age, gender, and marital status) were not found to be significant in learned resourcefulness and any of the burnout dimensions. “The school type” is the only variable which was found to be significant in the three burnout sub-dimensions. Results are discussed in the light of current literature and suggestions were provided. |
url |
http://www.ojsijpes.com/index.php/ijpes/article/view/16 |
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AT gultengenc learnedresourcefulnessandburnoutlevelsofenglishteachers |
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