Society & Culture - Posted by Andy Henion-Michigan State on Wednesday, November 14, 2012 17:20 - 0 Comments    
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Principals sway new teachers to stay or quit

Nearly a third of teachers in their first two years either change schools or quit altogether. The study, which gauged novice teachers’ intent to remain teaching and the factors that might influence that decision, found that relationships with principals were the top factor. (Credit: Veer)

MICHIGAN STATE (US) — The number one reason new teachers switch schools or careers isn’t lack of resources or a heavy workload—it’s their relationships with their principals.


Peter Youngs, associate professor of educational policy at Michigan State University and lead investigator on the study, says the findings reinforce the need for principals to serve as strong, supportive leaders in their schools.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1086/667725

“The principal isn’t there just to help the novice teacher handle discipline and classroom management,” Youngs says. “What really makes a strong administrative climate is when the principal also knows the academic content well and can work with the beginning teacher on curriculum and instruction.”

Youngs and Ben Pogodzinski of Wayne State University surveyed 184 beginning teachers of grades 1-8 in 11 large school districts in Michigan and Indiana. Their study, published in Elementary School Journal, was prompted by the fact that nearly a third of teachers in their first two years either change schools or quit altogether.

This can be particularly harmful to low-income urban schools that have trouble recruiting and retaining teachers, Youngs says.

The study gauged novice teachers’ intent to remain teaching and the factors that might influence that decision. Youngs says he was surprised to learn the frequency with which novices met with their school-assigned mentor teachers did not make them more or less likely to continue teaching.

In fact, the most important factor that influenced commitment was the beginning teacher’s perception of how well the school principal worked with the teaching staff as a whole. This was a stronger predictor of intent to remain teaching than having adequate resources, the amount of administrative duties the teacher had or the size of their workload.

Youngs says the findings point to a potential need for more training for principals in university or professional-development programs.

“The focus,” he says, “would be on how principals could increase their knowledge of setting a healthy, productive school climate and understanding ways that their actions and leadership can impact new teachers’ attitudes and outcomes.”

Source: Michigan State University

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