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Predicting Burnout In High-school Journalism Teachers: An Exploratory Study (open access)

Predicting Burnout In High-school Journalism Teachers: An Exploratory Study

This research investigated high-school journalism educators’ use and teaching of convergence technology, as well as their self-efficacy, job satisfaction, job dissatisfaction, and burnout. In general, instructions and uses of multimedia tools were not as prevalent as traditional-journalism instructions and tools. One-third of the teachers expressed moderate or strong levels of burnout in terms of their emotional exhaustion. Although both job satisfaction and job dissatisfaction were strong predictors of burnout, self-efficacy was not. Job dissatisfaction was the strongest predictor of burnout, but contrary to the past research, gender turned out to be the second strongest predictor. Qualitative in-depth interviews with a controlled random sampling of survey respondents revealed that maternal mindset and gender roles strongly contribute to female high-school journalism teachers’ expressed burnout and emotional exhaustion.
Date: December 2011
Creator: Sparling, Gretchen B.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, December 20, 1957 (open access)

The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, December 20, 1957

Semiweekly student newspaper from the North Texas State College in Denton, Texas that includes local, state, and campus news along with advertising.
Date: December 20, 1957
Creator: Caton, Jim
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History