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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Oriane Petiot; Jérôme Visioli; Gilles Kermarrec – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2025
Introduction: Originally, the concept of emotional labor comes from the sociological work of Hochschild (1983. "The Managed Heart: Commercialization of Human Feeling." Berkeley: The University of California Press). In recent decades, it has also been defined in approaches of a more psychological nature within a variety of professional…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Physical Education Teachers, Affective Behavior, Emotional Response
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Leigh McLean; Nathan Jones – Grantee Submission, 2025
Processes of classroom emotional transmission have been identified whereby the emotions expressed by an individual are induced in others, with particular attention paid to how this unfolds among teachers and their students. However, there is still much to be clarified about how teachers' and students' emotions transmit in the classroom, including…
Descriptors: Grade 4, Elementary School Teachers, Elementary School Students, Mathematics Instruction
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Inés M. Gómez-Chacón; José M. Marbán – ZDM: Mathematics Education, 2024
Affective and cognitive processes may be jointly researched to better understand mathematics learning, paying special interest to emotions related to knowledge acquisition. However, it remains necessary to explore these processes in studies linked to the education of pre-service mathematics teachers. This study aims to characterize epistemic…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Preservice Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Knowledge Base for Teaching
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Eishin Teraoka; Félix Enrique Lobo de Diego; David Kirk – European Physical Education Review, 2024
This study aims to investigate the complexity of the practices of pedagogies of affect in physical education in response to urgent mental health issues among children and young people. As a proxy for measuring the effects of pedagogies of affect on pupils' outcomes, self-determination theory (SDT) has informed teaching approaches for student…
Descriptors: Teacher Behavior, Teacher Student Relationship, Physical Education, Physical Education Teachers
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Richards, K. Andrew R.; Washburn, Nicholas; Lee, Ye Hoon – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 2020
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to test a conceptual model that specified relationships among perceived organizational support (POS), emotional labor, job satisfaction, and affective commitment. Methods: The participants included 297 physical educators who completed an online survey. The data were analyzed using confirmatory factor analysis…
Descriptors: Physical Education Teachers, Teacher Behavior, Affective Behavior, Teacher Motivation
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Li, Xiaoyu; Huebner, E. Scott; Tian, Lili – School Mental Health, 2022
This study aimed to identify multiple co-developmental trajectories of the three components (i.e., school satisfaction, positive affect in school and negative affect in school) of subjective well-being (SWB) in school and their relations to predictors and outcomes among Chinese elementary school students. A total of 2756 students (M[subscript age]…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Well Being, Student Satisfaction
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Blanchard, Charlotte; Haccoun, Robert R. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
Support provided by the research advisor is understood to be one of the keys to success in higher-level studies. However, support remains a construct operationalised in many different ways, making it difficult to prescribe those behaviours supervisors should adopt or abandon to optimise support offered to students. This self-report study examines…
Descriptors: Faculty Advisers, Social Support Groups, Student Attitudes, Graduate Students
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2017
This paper discusses teacher resistance to recognizing some perspectives of difficult histories. The paper focuses on the following question: How does affect contribute not only to the formation of teacher resistance, but also to its disruption in ways that enable the productive reclaiming of teachers' engagement with traumatic histories? To…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Social Theories, Teaching Methods, Faculty Development
Hirshberg, Matthew J. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Teaching is a demanding profession that requires adroitness in social, emotional, and intellectual realms. The high levels of stress and burnout teachers report, as well as the alarmingly high rates of teacher turnover reveal that many teachers are not adequately prepared to teach. There is mounting evidence that domain-general social, cognitive,…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Well Being, Teacher Burnout, Skill Development
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Nurmi, Jari-Erik; Silinskas, Gintautas; Kiuru, Noona; Pakarinen, Eija; Turunen, Tiina; Siekkinen, Martti; Tolvanen, Asko; Poikkeus, Anna-Maija; Lerkkanen, Marja-Kristiina – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2018
This cross-lagged longitudinal study examines the evocative impact of a child's psychological adjustment on teachers' affective response and instructional support for a child, and the influence this support and response has on the child's subsequent adjustment. A hundred and seventeen Finnish teachers self-rated the instructional support they…
Descriptors: Student Adjustment, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior, Responses
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Moore, Alex; Clarke, Matthew – Journal of Education Policy, 2016
This study provides a critical exploration of the way teachers' attachment to notions of professionalism may facilitate a process whereby teachers find themselves obliged to enact centralised and local education policies that they do not believe in but are required to implement. The study argues that professionalism involves an entanglement of…
Descriptors: Professionalism, Teacher Attitudes, Educational Policy, Neoliberalism
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Balwant, Paul T. – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2017
Leadership theory can provide a route for investigating teaching via the concept of instructor leadership. Instructor leadership is defined as a process whereby instructors exert intentional influence over students to guide, structure and facilitate classroom activities and relationships in a class. Instructor leadership in higher education…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Teacher Behavior, Teacher Student Relationship, Classroom Communication
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Prosen, Simona; Vitulic, Helena Smrtnik; Škraban, Olga Poljšak – Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal, 2011
Emotions are an integral part of "classroom life" and are experienced in teacher-student interactions quite often (Hosotani & Imai-Matsumura, 2011). The present study focuses on teachers' emotions in classrooms. Its purpose is to establish which emotions are expressed by teachers in their interactions with students, the triggering…
Descriptors: Teacher Behavior, Emotional Response, Teacher Student Relationship, Interaction
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O'Connor, Kate Eliza – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2008
This paper discusses the findings of a qualitative interpretive study on secondary school teachers' professional identities and emotional experiences. Teachers' work is emotionally engaging and personally demanding, yet the caring nature of the teaching role is largely neglected in educational policy and teacher standards. This paper examines the…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, Emotional Experience, Educational Policy, Secondary Education
Johnson, Doug – Library Media Connection, 2004
The reasons for creating difficult people in education are suspected to be budget constraints, increased expectations and bad educational press. The kinds of difficult people according to library specialist Luisa are discussed along with the terms the psychologists use to describe them.
Descriptors: School Personnel, Teacher Behavior, Affective Behavior, Librarians
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