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Feiman-Nemser, Sharon; Floden, Robert E. – 1984
In the past, many social scientists were content to study teaching from a distance, borrowing concepts mainly from psychology and sociology to explain what teaching was like. Increasingly, students of teaching have come to value the insider's viewpoint and to rely on teachers as informants. This paper brings together research about the meaning of…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Life Satisfaction, Locus of Control, Need Gratification
Mahan, James M. – 1981
Elementary and secondary school student teachers were tested before, during, and after their teaching experiences to determine if there were changes in their concerns about teaching. Three categories of concerns, each with eight items, were ranked: methods concerns, pertaining to instructional skills and content knowledge; cultural concerns,…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Elementary Secondary Education, Job Satisfaction, Locus of Control
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Hollinger, Constance L.; Fleming, Elyse S. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 1988
The study examined the antecedents and correlates of general life satisfaction as reported by 108 gifted and talented young women. Results of the six-year longitudinal analyses supported the predicted centrality of instrumental self perception to social self esteem, occupational confidence, and general life satisfaction. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Females, Gifted, Job Satisfaction, Life Satisfaction
Menlo, Allen; And Others – 1986
A report is given of a study comparing the classroom, school, and community phenomena that secondary school teachers in the United States, England, and West Germany experience as sources of enthusiasm and discouragement in their professional work. The teachers were interviewed in groups of five to ten in their own schools. The open-end structured…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries, Job Satisfaction, Locus of Control
Bumpus, J. Frank – 1981
A model that conceptualizes career stress for faculty members and that suggests options for enhancing career vitality is considered. The model draws upon attribution theory, the locus of control in work of Julian Rotter and the literature of depression by Martin E. P. Seligman. It suggests that perceived causes, or attributions, are directly…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Faculty, Depression (Psychology), Faculty College Relationship