What School Factors Influence Teachers' Perceptions of Safety

The purpose of the study was to describe factors that make teachers feel safe in their classrooms and school buildings. An in-depth exploration of contributing factors to feelings of safety for teachers will assist the field of education when planning facilities and preparing current and future scho...

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Main Author: Leonard, Nancy Hardie
Other Authors: Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73677
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-736772020-09-29T05:37:06Z What School Factors Influence Teachers' Perceptions of Safety Leonard, Nancy Hardie Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Earthman, Glen I. Cash, Carol S. Sokol, Gerry Robert Alexander, Michael D. school facilities colleagues safety policies and administrative practices The purpose of the study was to describe factors that make teachers feel safe in their classrooms and school buildings. An in-depth exploration of contributing factors to feelings of safety for teachers will assist the field of education when planning facilities and preparing current and future school administrators in leading schools with a healthy and safe climate for teachers. For this study, the researcher surveyed all teaching personnel in a school division which was a total of 133 full-time, fully licensed teachers employed by a rural school division in Southside Virginia. A survey instrument with both quantitative and open ended questions was developed to investigate perceptions of safety in participants' responses regarding the physical characteristics of school buildings and classrooms, the influence of colleague relationships, and administrative practices and school division policies that influence teachers' feelings of safety. The quantitative survey questions utilized a Likert-scale format for participants to indicate degrees of agreement with statements with responses that ranged from strongly agree to strongly disagree. The opened ended questions provided for qualitative investigation by allowing participants to provide answers in their own words regarding the four research sub-questions. Findings from the study indicated that teachers in the study generally felt safe in their schools. Teachers indicated perceiving that the greatest violence risk was posed by outside intruders and concern for safety was not generally caused by student behavior. Teachers' perceptions of safety were influenced by the presence of a resource officer in their school building, locked exterior doors, the use of surveillance cameras, the presence of a supportive and visible school principal, and the support of their teacher colleagues. Ed. D. 2016-12-12T19:12:53Z 2016-12-12T19:12:53Z 2016-07-01 Dissertation vt_gsexam:8511 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73677 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic school facilities
colleagues
safety policies
and administrative practices
spellingShingle school facilities
colleagues
safety policies
and administrative practices
Leonard, Nancy Hardie
What School Factors Influence Teachers' Perceptions of Safety
description The purpose of the study was to describe factors that make teachers feel safe in their classrooms and school buildings. An in-depth exploration of contributing factors to feelings of safety for teachers will assist the field of education when planning facilities and preparing current and future school administrators in leading schools with a healthy and safe climate for teachers. For this study, the researcher surveyed all teaching personnel in a school division which was a total of 133 full-time, fully licensed teachers employed by a rural school division in Southside Virginia. A survey instrument with both quantitative and open ended questions was developed to investigate perceptions of safety in participants' responses regarding the physical characteristics of school buildings and classrooms, the influence of colleague relationships, and administrative practices and school division policies that influence teachers' feelings of safety. The quantitative survey questions utilized a Likert-scale format for participants to indicate degrees of agreement with statements with responses that ranged from strongly agree to strongly disagree. The opened ended questions provided for qualitative investigation by allowing participants to provide answers in their own words regarding the four research sub-questions. Findings from the study indicated that teachers in the study generally felt safe in their schools. Teachers indicated perceiving that the greatest violence risk was posed by outside intruders and concern for safety was not generally caused by student behavior. Teachers' perceptions of safety were influenced by the presence of a resource officer in their school building, locked exterior doors, the use of surveillance cameras, the presence of a supportive and visible school principal, and the support of their teacher colleagues. === Ed. D.
author2 Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
author_facet Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Leonard, Nancy Hardie
author Leonard, Nancy Hardie
author_sort Leonard, Nancy Hardie
title What School Factors Influence Teachers' Perceptions of Safety
title_short What School Factors Influence Teachers' Perceptions of Safety
title_full What School Factors Influence Teachers' Perceptions of Safety
title_fullStr What School Factors Influence Teachers' Perceptions of Safety
title_full_unstemmed What School Factors Influence Teachers' Perceptions of Safety
title_sort what school factors influence teachers' perceptions of safety
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73677
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