TY - JOUR
T1 - Navigating burnout
T2 - a study of teacher identity in Chile, Ecuador, Brazil, Spain and Australia
AU - Rojas, Jorge Chávez
AU - Barril, Juan Pablo
AU - Jiménez, Tatiana López
AU - Clarà, Marc
AU - Ramos, Fabiano Silvestre
AU - Peel, Karen
AU - Justiniano, Bernardita
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Pedagogy, Culture & Society.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - A key tool amongst the strategies used by teachers to combat stress at work is the construction and development of a professional identity. The underlying idea is that professional identity has the potential to prevent or help teachers to overcome burnout, a problem that is increasingly common within the profession. We conducted a multiple case study and analysed five subjective learning experiences recounted by novel teachers working in Chile, Ecuador, Brazil, Spain and Australia. Results show that (i) teachers constantly experience scenarios that lead to stress or exhaustion and involve various negatively valenced emotional evaluations; (ii) the substitution of these evaluations is particularly relevant, as it contributes to the formation of new meanings and positions relative to the situation; (iii) this repositioning may be connected to particular objects, to the subjects themselves, or to positions within the community in question; (iv) positively valenced emotional evaluations may be substituted for negatively valenced emotional evaluations, reflecting that positional changes are not always fruitful; and (v) some emotionally valenced evaluations endure over time and are key generators of professional stress.
AB - A key tool amongst the strategies used by teachers to combat stress at work is the construction and development of a professional identity. The underlying idea is that professional identity has the potential to prevent or help teachers to overcome burnout, a problem that is increasingly common within the profession. We conducted a multiple case study and analysed five subjective learning experiences recounted by novel teachers working in Chile, Ecuador, Brazil, Spain and Australia. Results show that (i) teachers constantly experience scenarios that lead to stress or exhaustion and involve various negatively valenced emotional evaluations; (ii) the substitution of these evaluations is particularly relevant, as it contributes to the formation of new meanings and positions relative to the situation; (iii) this repositioning may be connected to particular objects, to the subjects themselves, or to positions within the community in question; (iv) positively valenced emotional evaluations may be substituted for negatively valenced emotional evaluations, reflecting that positional changes are not always fruitful; and (v) some emotionally valenced evaluations endure over time and are key generators of professional stress.
KW - novel teachers
KW - Professional teacher identity
KW - subjective learning experience
KW - teacher burnout
KW - teaching work
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85182445725&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14681366.2024.2302314
DO - 10.1080/14681366.2024.2302314
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85182445725
SN - 1468-1366
JO - Pedagogy, Culture and Society
JF - Pedagogy, Culture and Society
ER -