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Janet Orchard – Journal of Religious Education, 2024
This paper, which was originally a keynote address, offers an analysis of the crisis in retention, and recruitment of teachers of Religious EducationĀ (RE). A reflexive assessment is offered to the political lament 'where have all the RE teachers gone?' The author, drawing on over three decades of experience and involvement with religious education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religious Education, Teacher Recruitment, Teacher Persistence
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Jerrim, John; Sims, Sam; Taylor, Hannah – British Educational Research Journal, 2021
The mental health and well-being of teachers is an issue of great policy concern. This is particularly true in England, where high workload and the associated stress is thought to be leading to a recruitment and retention crisis within the education profession. But do individuals who decide to leave teaching for another career actually see their…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence, Stress Variables, Mental Health
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Nathan McJames; Andrew Parnell; Ann O'Shea – Educational Review, 2025
Teacher shortages and attrition are problems of international concern. One of the most frequent reasons for teachers leaving the profession is a lack of job satisfaction. Accordingly, in this study we have adopted a causal inference machine learning approach to identify practical interventions for improving overall levels of job satisfaction. We…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Teacher Surveys, Administrator Surveys, Faculty Mobility
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Martindale, Nicholas – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
How have public sector austerity and the outsourcing of school provision under the Academies programme affected the state school workforce in England? Existing research claims that teachers are being substituted by cheaper support staff and that schools are becoming increasingly dominated by managers. However, these claims focus on the period…
Descriptors: Public Sector, Retrenchment, Outsourcing, Educational Trends
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Liu, Dan; Che, Siqi; Zhu, Wenzhong – SAGE Open, 2022
Academic mobility, given its importance in the dissemination of knowledge and globalization of research collaboration, has received growing attention over the past decades. Based on a bibliometric analysis of the literature on academic mobility (119) from 343 journal articles in Web of Science over the period of 2010 to 2020 with the use of…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Faculty Mobility, Global Approach, Journal Articles
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Kathryn Spicksley; Alison Kington – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
In this paper, we make initial advances towards building an argument for the inclusion of Critical Literacy Awareness within the new Early Career Framework in England. Using illustrative examples from recent research projects, we argue that post-2010 education policy has discursively divided practitioners, structuring relationships between…
Descriptors: Metalinguistics, Beginning Teachers, Collegiality, Teacher Motivation
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Brady, Jude; Wilson, Elaine – Improving Schools, 2022
Teaching is understood to be a highly stressful profession. In England, workload, high-stakes accountability policies and pupil behaviour are often cited as stressors that contribute to teachers' decisions to leave posts in the state-funded sector. Many of these teachers leave state teaching to take jobs in private schools, but very little is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Private Schools
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Christine Pascal; Tony Bertram; Sally Cave; Tina Bruce; Helen Lyndon; Sue Bennett; Anne Denham – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2024
This paper presents a narrative case study of an innovative Froebelian approach to professional development, implemented in a large Nursery School and Family Centre in southern England undertaken as part of an extended programme of research and development funded by the Froebel Trust from 2021-2024 which was trans-national, including two early…
Descriptors: Action Research, Faculty Development, Communities of Practice, Teaching Methods
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Vanessa Walker; Tristan Bunnell – Journal of Research in International Education, 2024
This paper investigates the experiences of six British-trained teachers who moved from teaching GCSE in state-funded schools in England to teach in two separate English-speaking well-established traditional international schools in Northern Europe where they began to teach the International Baccalaureate's Middle Years Programme (IBMYP). The…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement Programs, Teacher Attitudes, Student Centered Learning, Middle School Teachers
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Cottle, Daniel – Physics Education, 2022
Three new physics teachers graduating from a university provider of initial teacher education in England were paired with a recently retired physics subject specialist teacher in order to provide informal mentoring during their first year of teaching. The aim of this was to explore if a mentoring intervention of this kind could support teacher…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Mentors
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Plust, Urszula; Joseph, Stephen; Murphy, David – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
This qualitative study presents an analysis of the experiences of a teacher who had recently left working in an England state funded primary school. Using reflective lifeworld methodology, this study explored the teacher's struggle to be authentic in the context of state funded education. Three prominent themes were identified as: (1) enhancement…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Faculty Mobility, Professional Identity
Worth, Jack; McLean, Dawson; Sharp, Caroline – National Foundation for Educational Research, 2022
Racial diversity within the school workforce is valuable in 'fostering social cohesion and most importantly, in supporting pupils to grow and develop in an environment of visible, diverse role models' (DfE, 2018c, p.2). A diverse workforce is likely to promote greater cultural understanding and inclusion when educating pupils from diverse ethnic…
Descriptors: Minority Group Teachers, Diversity (Faculty), Disproportionate Representation, Preservice Teacher Education
Sims, Sam; Jerrim, John – UK Department for Education, 2020
England currently faces a shortage of teachers, in part due to declining retention. Research suggests that one important influence on teachers' decisions about whether to leave teaching is the quality of working conditions in their school. Understanding which specific aspects of working conditions have the strongest relationship with retention…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Administrator Surveys, Teacher Surveys, Teaching Conditions
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Sims, Sam – British Educational Research Journal, 2020
Teacher shortages are a recurring problem in publicly funded schools, in part because of poor retention. Working conditions in schools are an important predictor of teacher job satisfaction and retention, yet research has so far made limited headway in identifying the specific aspects of the working environment which matter. This research uses…
Descriptors: Teaching Conditions, Correlation, Job Satisfaction, Faculty Mobility
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Nutbrown, Cathy – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2021
In the context of an ongoing policy crisis in relation to the qualifications of the early childhood workforce in England, this paper first rehearses the context and long overdue need for reform before presenting a framework for career structure and professional early childhood education qualifications in England. This framework is designed to…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Change, Preschool Teachers, Preschool Education
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