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Elementary Teachers’ Emotional Landscape: Insights Beyond Existing Literature (Stage 1, 2:38 PM)

Thu, April 9, 2:15 to 3:45pm PDT (2:15 to 3:45pm PDT), Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Exhibit Hall A - Stage 1

Abstract

Teachers’ emotions are connected to their instruction and students’ achievement. We interviewed fifty-six teachers about their emotions at the end of a teaching day and coded the emotion types, as well as the emotion reasons. Findings showed that teachers expressed both positive and negative emotions equally, with about a quarter stating non-emotion words describing physical exhaustion, which may indicate burnout. Emotion reasons were multifaceted, including student-related factors while also foregrounding macro-level factors (e.g., intrusion of political ideology into schooling). Findings underscore the importance of qualitative approaches to teacher emotions research, which facilitate authentic expression of emotions. Also, there is a need for further exploration of indicators of teacher burnout and investigation into the systems-level reasons for teachers’ emotions beyond student-level factors.

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