Sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape

Magister Commercii - MCom === The main sources of teacher stress stem from difficulty in maintaining classroom discipline, time pressures, workload demands, excessive change, being evaluated by others, challenging relationships with colleagues and poor working conditions. This study therefore highli...

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Main Author: Bearschank, Dorothy
Other Authors: Heslop, Karl
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/2110
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-21102017-08-02T04:00:13Z Sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape Bearschank, Dorothy Heslop, Karl Dept. of Industrial Psychology Faculty of Economics and Management Sciences Teacher Stress Occupational Stressors High Risk Schools Job Satisfaction Job Overload Job Control Teacher Attrition Teacher Burnout Learner Misbehaviour Coping Strategies Magister Commercii - MCom The main sources of teacher stress stem from difficulty in maintaining classroom discipline, time pressures, workload demands, excessive change, being evaluated by others, challenging relationships with colleagues and poor working conditions. This study therefore highlights the significant relationship between occupational stressors and the stress experienced by teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape. Occupational stress is related to job satisfaction, job overload and job control. The coping strategies of teachers at high risk secondary schools are explored. The results indicate that there were no significant relationships between teacher stress and job satisfaction, job overload and job control at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape. Job satisfaction however, showed an inverse, albeit not significant relationship to teacher stress. Furthermore, male and female teachers respond differently to these occupational stressors. Females were more prone to the experience of stress than males. The recommendations are based on the conclusions drawn from the study. In conclusion, occupational stress is considered a major source of stress for teachers, which needs to be addressed more vigorously at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape. South Africa 2013-09-13T07:19:34Z 2011/02/25 10:07 2011/04/18 2013-09-13T07:19:34Z 2010 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11394/2110 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Teacher Stress
Occupational Stressors
High Risk Schools
Job Satisfaction
Job Overload
Job Control
Teacher Attrition
Teacher Burnout
Learner Misbehaviour
Coping Strategies
spellingShingle Teacher Stress
Occupational Stressors
High Risk Schools
Job Satisfaction
Job Overload
Job Control
Teacher Attrition
Teacher Burnout
Learner Misbehaviour
Coping Strategies
Bearschank, Dorothy
Sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape
description Magister Commercii - MCom === The main sources of teacher stress stem from difficulty in maintaining classroom discipline, time pressures, workload demands, excessive change, being evaluated by others, challenging relationships with colleagues and poor working conditions. This study therefore highlights the significant relationship between occupational stressors and the stress experienced by teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape. Occupational stress is related to job satisfaction, job overload and job control. The coping strategies of teachers at high risk secondary schools are explored. The results indicate that there were no significant relationships between teacher stress and job satisfaction, job overload and job control at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape. Job satisfaction however, showed an inverse, albeit not significant relationship to teacher stress. Furthermore, male and female teachers respond differently to these occupational stressors. Females were more prone to the experience of stress than males. The recommendations are based on the conclusions drawn from the study. In conclusion, occupational stress is considered a major source of stress for teachers, which needs to be addressed more vigorously at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape. === South Africa
author2 Heslop, Karl
author_facet Heslop, Karl
Bearschank, Dorothy
author Bearschank, Dorothy
author_sort Bearschank, Dorothy
title Sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape
title_short Sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape
title_full Sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape
title_fullStr Sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape
title_full_unstemmed Sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the Western Cape
title_sort sources of stress for teachers at high risk secondary schools in the western cape
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/2110
work_keys_str_mv AT bearschankdorothy sourcesofstressforteachersathighrisksecondaryschoolsinthewesterncape
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