Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Foreword
- Introduction: Burnout and the Teaching Profession
- PART ONE TEACHER BURNOUT: A CRITICAL REVIEW AND SYNTHESIS
- PART TWO TEACHER BURNOUT: PERSPECTIVES AND REMEDIES
- 7 Inconsequentiality – The Key to Understanding Teacher Burnout
- 8 Turning Our Schools into a Healthier Workplace: Bridging Between Professional Self-Efficacy and Professional Demands
- 9 Teaching Career: Between Burnout and Fading Away? Reflections from a Narrative and Biographical Perspective
- 10 A Psychosocial Interpretation of Teacher Stress and Burnout
- 11 Burnout Among Teachers as a Crisis in Psychological Contracts
- 12 Progress in Understanding Teacher Burnout
- 13 Teachers' Moral Purpose: Stress, Vulnerability, and Strength
- 14 Teacher Burnout from a Social-Cognitive Perspective: A Theoretical Position Paper
- 15 Professional Identity, School Reform, and Burnout: Some Reflections on Teacher Burnout
- 16 Conflicting Mindscapes and the Inevitability of Stress in Teaching
- 17 Do Teachers Burn Out More Easily? A Comparison of Teachers with Other Social Professions on Work Stress and Burnout Symptoms
- 18 Teacher Burnout
- PART THREE TEACHER BURNOUT: A RESEARCH AND INTERVENTION AGENDA
- References
- Index
11 - Burnout Among Teachers as a Crisis in Psychological Contracts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Foreword
- Introduction: Burnout and the Teaching Profession
- PART ONE TEACHER BURNOUT: A CRITICAL REVIEW AND SYNTHESIS
- PART TWO TEACHER BURNOUT: PERSPECTIVES AND REMEDIES
- 7 Inconsequentiality – The Key to Understanding Teacher Burnout
- 8 Turning Our Schools into a Healthier Workplace: Bridging Between Professional Self-Efficacy and Professional Demands
- 9 Teaching Career: Between Burnout and Fading Away? Reflections from a Narrative and Biographical Perspective
- 10 A Psychosocial Interpretation of Teacher Stress and Burnout
- 11 Burnout Among Teachers as a Crisis in Psychological Contracts
- 12 Progress in Understanding Teacher Burnout
- 13 Teachers' Moral Purpose: Stress, Vulnerability, and Strength
- 14 Teacher Burnout from a Social-Cognitive Perspective: A Theoretical Position Paper
- 15 Professional Identity, School Reform, and Burnout: Some Reflections on Teacher Burnout
- 16 Conflicting Mindscapes and the Inevitability of Stress in Teaching
- 17 Do Teachers Burn Out More Easily? A Comparison of Teachers with Other Social Professions on Work Stress and Burnout Symptoms
- 18 Teacher Burnout
- PART THREE TEACHER BURNOUT: A RESEARCH AND INTERVENTION AGENDA
- References
- Index
Summary
Burnout was first investigated in the 1970s as a crisis of overextended and disillusioned human service workers. Cherniss (1980b) described burnout among human service workers as resulting from the collapse of the professional mystique, in that people entering public human service careers had developed unrealistic expectations about their professions on the basis of their training and general cultural background. They found that their professions did not provide the degree of autonomy and collegiality necessary for fulfilling a professional role. Further, they found much of the work to be tedious, providing routine services to reluctant and ungrateful recipients. The collapse of the professional mystique produced in many new professionals serious doubts about their effectiveness. At the core of the burnout syndrome are conflicts of caregivers' values for enhancing the lives of their recipients with limitations in the structure and process of human service organizations.
In the ensuing two decades, training programs have taken a more proactive approach to preparing students for the real demands and limitations of human service work, and cultural depictions of service providers have become more realistic as well. Service providers continue to experience burnout when resources are inadequate to meet the demands of their work. However, the nature of the syndrome changed as human service occupations evolved as professions.
Currently, the experience of burnout occurs within a decidedly different social context, with human service workers struggling for social credibility and fearing job insecurity.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Understanding and Preventing Teacher BurnoutA Sourcebook of International Research and Practice, pp. 202 - 210Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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