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The causes of stress and its management by school management teams in private primary schools in the Tshwane South DistrictVan Staden, Judith Johanna 02 1900 (has links)
A quantitative, descriptive method was used in this study. A purposeful sample of 239
(N=239) participants was chosen. At a theoretical level, the study provided insight into
the causes of stress among educators, the impact of stress on them and the influence of
school management teams to support educators in the management of their stress. The
literature review confirmed that stress of educators is caused by internal and external
factors. It also confirmed that stress may lead to physical and mental illnesses and may
influence the emotional state of an educator. The literature confirmed that where school
management teams support educators, it reduces the stress levels of the educators.
From an empirical perspective, the study confirmed that external factors such as long
working hours and workload do have an impact on the educator’s stress levels. This then
leads to educators feeling irritated, exhausted and burned out. On the role of school
management teams supporting educators to manage the stress levels, the empirical
outcome was neutral. / Educational Management and Leadership / M. Ed. (Educational Management)
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The development and implementation of an effective mentoring programme to improve job satisfaction among beginner teachers at primary schools in the Mpumalanga Province of South AfricaHugo, Jean-Pierre 13 September 2018 (has links)
Teachers leaving the profession is an ongoing problem; fewer teachers enter the profession each year and the number of teachers leaving the profession has increased. Many teachers listed job satisfaction as a reason for leaving the education profession, whilst citing the lack of mentoring as a cause of job dissatisfaction. Mentoring is known as the planned paring of a more experienced person with a lesser individual to help with the professional development of that individual and reduce teacher turnover.
The aim of the study is to explore the impact of an effective mentoring programme at primary schools by developing and implementing such a mentoring programme to support and improve job satisfaction among beginner teachers in the province of Mpumalanga entering the profession for the first time. The following quantitative techniques were used during this study: document analysis and Likert-scale questionnaires, completed by 1 000 male and female teachers (principals, deputy principals, heads of departments, teachers and student teachers) from different races and cultures (20 teachers per school) from 50 randomly selected rural primary schools, private primary schools and Quintile 4 and 5 primary schools in the province of Mpumalanga.
The analysis of data enabled me to identify a series of factors that were utilised to develop a mentoring programme that school management can implement in their schools to help beginner teachers to cope in their new work environment in order to improve job satisfaction and improve teacher retention. The factors identified include: aspects of job satisfaction that support leaners in achieving their goals; aspects of school management; the contribution of mentoring programme on the job satisfaction of beginner teachers; the responsibility of a mentor in developing a mentoring programme; the responsibility of a mentee in developing a mentoring programme; the responsibility of schools in developing a mentoring programme and characteristics that should be demonstrated by a mentor. From the data gathered, a mentoring programme was developed, namely the Hugo mentoring model. This model outlined the roles and responsibilities of mentors, mentees and school management throughout the mentoring process. The model also provided steps that should be taken into consideration when organising meetings between mentors and mentees. / Educational Studies / D. Ed.
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