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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
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Janine E. Wyatt; Linda Hobbs – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
This paper shows how system-level data can generate useful insights into the profile of first-year graduates who are teaching out-of-field (OOF). Understanding in-school demand and impacts on first-year graduates teaching OOF is important, especially when the first years of teaching are complex, busy, and involve a steep learning curve. A mixed…
Descriptors: Teacher Qualifications, Foreign Countries, College Graduates, Public School Teachers
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Rebecca J. Collie – Learning Professional, 2024
Many countries around the world are facing issues related to low levels of teacher wellbeing. In Australia, for example, there is a severe teacher shortage, resulting in many understaffed schools. Although this shortage is due to a confluence of factors, part of the cause stems from the fact that the support provided to teachers in recent years…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Welfare, Academic Achievement, Teacher Shortage
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Louise Gwenneth Phillips; Melissa Cain; Jenny Ritchie; Chris Campbell; Susan Davis; Cynthia Brock; Geraldine Burke; Kathryn Coleman; Esther Joosa – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic jolted teachers to the front line of complex, under resourced negotiation of quality distance learning, whilst also being key communicators with students and families about how to be COVID safe. Media reports debated preschool and school closures and child safety, but scarcely considered teachers. Motivated by the silencing…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Teacher Attitudes, School Closing
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Doris Testa; Nina Van Dyke – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2025
Responding to student demand for flexibility in the delivery of classes as well as the potential barriers and enabling factors supporting student success, universities have introduced distinctive educational models, including replacing the standard 12-week, sequential delivery of units of study with 4- or 8-week blocks of one or two units at a…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Success, Foreign Countries, Flexible Scheduling
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Ellen Larsen; Georgina Barton; Kristina Turner; Susie Garvis – Australian Educational Researcher, 2025
The work of contemporary teacher educators in university contexts is under increasing political and public scrutiny as the focus on Initial Teacher Education (ITE) reform intensifies. Consequently, there are growing concerns for teacher educators' wellbeing amidst escalating expectations and pressures. While research has explored the wellbeing of…
Descriptors: Well Being, Foreign Countries, Institutional Evaluation, Organizational Culture
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Pauline Mary Ross; Elliot Scanes – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2025
Australian higher education has faced both global economic and environmental challenges, including most recently the COVID-19 pandemic. To deliver in this resource constrained environment, academic workforce and academic roles are being reshaped. Teaching and education focused academic roles are rapidly increasing but come with opportunities and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society), Sustainability, Teaching (Occupation)
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Helena Granziera; Rebecca J. Collie; Anna Roberts; Brittany Corkish; Ashleigh Tickell; Mark Deady; Bridianne O'Dea; Michelle Tye; Aliza Werner-Seidler – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2025
Teaching has long been recognised as a demanding profession. Despite growing acknowledgement of the stress and emotional exhaustion experienced by teachers, limited research has considered how these experiences may be associated with mental health. Accordingly, the present research aimed to address this gap by identifying the current levels of…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Faculty Workload, Mental Health, Teacher Attitudes
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Sharon McDonough; Narelle Lemon – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2024
The spread of Coronavirus (COVID-19) across the globe has had a significant impact on teachers and teaching with countries around the world closing schools in an effort to slow the spread of the virus. Such a mass cessation of traditional face-to-face teaching has required schools and teachers to move rapidly to remote and, primarily, online…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Teaching Conditions, Well Being
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Meghan Stacey; Mihajla Gavin; Scott Fitzgerald; Susan McGrath-Champ; Rachel Wilson – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2024
Teacher workload is a growing problem internationally. In this article, we analyse an attempt by the state education bureaucracy of New South Wales (NSW), Australia, to address this through the 'Quality Time Program'. Drawing on labour process theory and Carol Bacchi's framework of 'What's the problem represented to be?', we analyse how the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Faculty Workload, Educational Policy, Public Education
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Narelle Lemon; Kristina Turner – Australian Educational Researcher, 2024
The declining wellbeing of Australian teachers is a longstanding problem, with much attention on retention, stress, burnout, and poor resourcing and conditions that impact wellbeing. Additionally, the COVID-19 pandemic has further illuminated these challenges. This qualitative study aimed to explore Australian teachers' perceptions of their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Well Being, Teacher Attitudes, COVID-19
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Victoria Poulos; Jae Yup Jung – Australasian Journal of Gifted Education, 2024
This study sought to determine the factors that motivate teachers to differentiate curriculum for gifted students in a case study school in Victoria, Australia. For this purpose, 10 teachers from Year 7-9 mixed ability classes at the school were engaged in interviews about their practice of differentiation specifically for gifted students and the…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Gifted Education, Individualized Instruction, Grade 7
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Elaine Stratford; Phillipa Watson; Brett Paull – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
Early career academics face a rapidly changing higher education sector and too little is known about what helps them flourish in the profession. This paper responds to that gap by reporting research undertaken in a single or intrinsic case study of one Australian university. We invited participation from a full cohort of 1019 academics in one…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Career Development, Family Work Relationship, Barriers
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Jillian Ryan; Nicole Koehler; Travis Cruickshank; Shane L. Rogers; Mandy Stanley – Australian Educational Researcher, 2024
Primary and secondary education systems experienced substantial disruption during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, little is known about how public health policy has affected Australian teachers during the pandemic. This study examines teacher perspectives on a sudden change of policy, whereby schools were abruptly opened to students at the…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, In Person Learning, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Rebekah Ward; Agata Mrva-Montoya; Maggie Nolan – Australian Universities' Review, 2024
Australian academics are being squeezed from all sides, facing ever-intensifying bureaucratic expectations around research output, coupled with increased teaching commitments and mounting administrative duties. These demands are occurring in an environment where most academics are still employed under traditional arrangements whereby, notionally,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Workload, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Amie Fabry – Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 2024
Early childhood pedagogical leadership has been found to enhance program quality by assisting educators to reach deeper understanding of pedagogical practices. In the early years of school where pedagogical tension resides, research on early childhood pedagogical leadership is scarce. Furthermore, there are few models of early childhood…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Instructional Leadership, Teaching Methods, Educational Quality
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