SELECTED SCHOOL CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPTO HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER RETENTION
ABSTRACT This study was conducted to examine the perceptions of Orange County high school teachers and administrators regarding selected school characteristics and their relationship to teacher retention. The study was based on another investigation conducted by the Charlotte Advocates of Education...
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2005
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ndltd-UCF-oai-digital.library.ucf.edu-ETD-34422014-09-08T04:48:02Z SELECTED SCHOOL CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPTO HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER RETENTION Mohapatra, Jhunu Teacher Retention ABSTRACT This study was conducted to examine the perceptions of Orange County high school teachers and administrators regarding selected school characteristics and their relationship to teacher retention. The study was based on another investigation conducted by the Charlotte Advocates of Education (2004) inquiring into the working conditions in schools and their impact on teacher retention. A total of 292 teachers with less than 4 years of experience and 14 administrators with more than 1 year of experience responded to 25 survey items related to the 6 factors comprising positive school characteristics. Factors such as School Facility, Resources, and Professional Development contributed positively to the school characteristics, and Collegial Environment, New Teacher Support, and Teacher Empowerment factors were present to a lesser degree. Administrators perceived, to a greater extent than did teachers, the presence of the six factors. For the most part, the perceptions of teachers regarding the six factors did not differ significantly based on sex, age, education, and ethnicity. Some differences between ethnic groups concerning Professional Development and New Teacher Support factors and some differences between age groups for Collegial Environment and Professional Development factors were determined. The presence of Professional Development and New Teacher Support was a good indicator of teachers' intention to stay in the teaching profession. One fourth of respondents (54, 25%) indicated interest in long-term teaching careers, and almost half of those surveyed wished to conclude their teaching careers within 5 (54, 25%) or 10 (43, 20%) years. Pawlas, George University of Central Florida Ed.D. Department of Educational Research, Technology and Leadership Education Educational Leadership 2005-12-01 Doctoral dissertation 2006-01-09 University Archives Electronic Theses and Dissertations CFE0000742 http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETD/id/3442 |
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Doctoral Thesis |
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Teacher Retention |
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Teacher Retention Mohapatra, Jhunu SELECTED SCHOOL CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPTO HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER RETENTION |
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ABSTRACT This study was conducted to examine the perceptions of Orange County high school teachers and administrators regarding selected school characteristics and their relationship to teacher retention. The study was based on another investigation conducted by the Charlotte Advocates of Education (2004) inquiring into the working conditions in schools and their impact on teacher retention. A total of 292 teachers with less than 4 years of experience and 14 administrators with more than 1 year of experience responded to 25 survey items related to the 6 factors comprising positive school characteristics. Factors such as School Facility, Resources, and Professional Development contributed positively to the school characteristics, and Collegial Environment, New Teacher Support, and Teacher Empowerment factors were present to a lesser degree. Administrators perceived, to a greater extent than did teachers, the presence of the six factors. For the most part, the perceptions of teachers regarding the six factors did not differ significantly based on sex, age, education, and ethnicity. Some differences between ethnic groups concerning Professional Development and New Teacher Support factors and some differences between age groups for Collegial Environment and Professional Development factors were determined. The presence of Professional Development and New Teacher Support was a good indicator of teachers' intention to stay in the teaching profession. One fourth of respondents (54, 25%) indicated interest in long-term teaching careers, and almost half of those surveyed wished to conclude their teaching careers within 5 (54, 25%) or 10 (43, 20%) years. === Ed.D. === Department of Educational Research, Technology and Leadership === Education === Educational Leadership |
author2 |
Pawlas, George |
author_facet |
Pawlas, George Mohapatra, Jhunu |
author |
Mohapatra, Jhunu |
author_sort |
Mohapatra, Jhunu |
title |
SELECTED SCHOOL CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPTO HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER RETENTION |
title_short |
SELECTED SCHOOL CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPTO HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER RETENTION |
title_full |
SELECTED SCHOOL CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPTO HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER RETENTION |
title_fullStr |
SELECTED SCHOOL CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPTO HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER RETENTION |
title_full_unstemmed |
SELECTED SCHOOL CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPTO HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER RETENTION |
title_sort |
selected school characteristics and their relationshipto high school teacher retention |
publisher |
University of Central Florida |
publishDate |
2005 |
url |
http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETD/id/3442 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mohapatrajhunu selectedschoolcharacteristicsandtheirrelationshiptohighschoolteacherretention |
_version_ |
1716712490334683136 |