Educ761-Istc685 Propdraftassignment 040822 1
Educ761-Istc685 Propdraftassignment 040822 1
Educ761-Istc685 Propdraftassignment 040822 1
The Teacher with Many Hats: Increased Responsibility and Teacher Burnout
Background
Teacher morale and burnout has been at the forefront of the educational discussion in the
post-covid world. In a 2022 NEA sponsored survey, 55% of the educators who participated in
the survey cited responded that they were contemplating leaving the profession, with many
participants citing burnout, long hours, and a stressful environment as their primary reasons for
possibly leaving. (Rizvic) Another survey run by the American Federation in Teachers noticed
that a 33% jump in teacher dissatisfaction with their jobs (jumping from 41% “dissatisfied” in
2020 to 74% in 2022), noting that “stressful” is the number one description of their jobs, and that
workload and more responsibilities are the greatest cause of their job getting worse (Hart) This
feeling of stress, henceforth referred to as burnout, is defined as a special type of job related
stress which typified as a state of complete mental and physical exhaustion that involves a sense
This burnout is starting to have a cost on the educational landscape: teachers have been
exiting the profession in record numbers: around 300,000 school teachers or 3% of the
population of the workforce have left the profession between 2020 and 2022. Schools are also
having trouble hiring and staffing their schools due to reduced availability of professionals; with
44% of public schools in 2022 reporting at least one or more vacant positions. (Dill) Even
amongst the teachers currently working, there has been an increase in the number of teachers
chronically absent from work (meaning having missed 10 or more days of teaching), with 29%
of teachers in one study found to be chronically absent during the 2021 school year. (Jones)
Many teachers have cited that amongst many other causes of this burnout, a large factor
contributing to burnout has been the increased number and types of responsibilities that they
must perform in their job. (Rizvic) In terms of this study, responsibility is defined as a type of
task that a teacher must perform to effectively meet the expectations of their job. Teachers are a
unique profession in that they are expected to perform many different types of tasks throughout
their work week: teachers are expected to be not only educators and lesson creators, but also
work as social-emotional support, reach out to parents, work as chaperones, run school clubs,
and continue professional development, to name a very few. While some of these responsibilities
are voluntary and rewarded either monetarily or with accreditation, many of these are considered
part of the expected duties of a teacher. To what degree then, does the number of responsibilities
and time spent on them affect teacher morale and sense of burnout?
Statement of Purpose
The idea that increased responsibility in general contributes to burnout is obvious and
proven by the previously mentioned surveys. More work typically means more effort which
means more stress, but this study seeks to look at the type of work that teachers perform on a
day-to-day basis, and codify which responsibilities feel the most grueling for our teachers. The
idea would be to hopefully identify which responsibilities are causing the most stress for our
teachers, or at what level or amount the number of responsibilities lead to burnout. This sort of
repairing this blight on teacher morale. The purpose of this study, then, is to categorize and chart
these responsibilities by having teachers log their time spent on various responsibilities in their
work week, and then to ascertain at what point the number of responsibilities leads to
professional burnout through teachers completing a professional burnout mental health survey.
Literature Review
Even before the pandemic occurred, teacher retention and job satisfaction were issues
that were pressing and worthy of study. Burnout is often tied to the idea of professional
wellbeing, which is best defined in a 2023 study whose goal was to define teacher wellbeing and
provide a holistic framework for analyzing and studying this complex concept. This study
categorized teacher wellbeing into three different metrics: professionalism, teacher positivity and
“flourishing,” and teacher negativity or feeling inadequate for their role. (Ozturk) This is
important to understand in regards to the proposed study as burnout is specifically tied to this
idea of wellbeing. If a teacher is feeling overworked to the point of exhaustion, or doesn’t feel
equipped either personally or by their workplace to handle the demands of their job, then this
will affect their outlook on their work, their attitude with their students, and eventually their
With this definition of wellbeing in mind, there have been several studies into the cause
of teacher burnout, especially amongst urban school populations, middle schools, and other areas
that are considered high stress and high risk educationally. A sweeping and comprehensive six
year 2014-2020 study looked to pinpoint the causes of teacher burnout by interviewing and
surveying 934 K-12 educators. This is an important study as this provides a pre-Covid baseline
for causes of teacher burnout. Overall, they found that teachers who practiced emotional self-
regulation, enjoyed a positive workplace environment and relationships with co-worker, and
have a sense of self-efficacy (feeling good at their job) suffer least from burnout and have the
best sense of wellbeing. Teachers who internalize and exhibit negative emotions, or who
experience negative workplace environment (i.e. bullying from other teachers, lack of support,
feelings of isolation) tend to suffer from the worst burnout. The study highlights that schools that
had mutual supports in place for teachers were generally considered the most successful at
allaying teacher burnout. (Sohail) Overall, this is an important study as it provides a baseline and
Another important 2019 pre-covid study is one that focused on the possible causes of
teacher burnout by studying teacher self-reports and two observational measures on 255 teachers
in 33 different urban middle schools over the course of a year. This study is important as it
looked for if there were demographic or community causes for teacher burnout. This study also
focused on the causes of the teacher’s stress through self-reports, but also on the effects of their
“stress” and burnout on the quality of their teaching. The final report was that the most stressed
middle school teachers were ones who were white, female, and serving at lower income
neighborhoods, while the least stressed were teachers who felt close to their coworkers, had
attained some level of self-efficacy, and were receiving adequate resources from their school.
Interestingly, though outside the comparative scope of my study, they noted that the most
stressed teachers generally tended to employ the most effective teaching habits. (Bottiani) This
is a valuable study as it provides a baseline for most/least stressed populations, but the outcome
of the study was focused more on identifying these populations and instructional consequences
of burnout.
important to look at recent studies as the teaching landscape has changed since quarantine. A
study that investigated the topic of teacher burnout and stress was a 2023 Portuguese study that
recorded in-depth profiles on 1878 Portuguese secondary teachers who self-identified as either
burnt-out or not burnt-out, and studied the profiles of the two groups for similarity and trends as
to causes of burn out. The study and profiles focused on cognitive appraisal (a subjective
evaluation of the degree of threat in their school environment), the number of their
administrative tasks and responsibilities, their perception of student misbehavior, and their
perception of parent involvement in student success. This study found that all the above could
impact a teacher’s well-being negatively, it did not necessarily contribute to the feeling of being
burnt-out amongst teachers. (Mota) This is important as it does point out an underlying and
subjective cause of burnout, in that it is often tied to individual personality type and sometimes
clinical depression and/or other psychological or emotional disorders. While there is an argument
about the ability to handle stress and burnout being subjective, morale trends in recent times
show that there is significant shift in the teaching environment that has made these stressors
more apparent and impactful to teacher morale. This is worth exploring and codifying through
this study.
Another 2023 study on burnout that does focus on teacher responsibility looks at it in the
focus of teacher responsibilities and expectations versus the number of resources and support
that they receive from the school. Instead of numbers of responsibilities, this focused on the
responsibilities in terms of class size, number of classes taught, and especially classroom
management difficulties. The study looked at 260 elementary school teachers in the United
States and used teacher surveys on classroom statistics and emotional wellness to form the basis
of their study. The findings were that the greatest impact on teacher burnout was when a teacher
had a class with chronic misbehavior, and they felt that they weren’t being supported by their
school. The findings stressed that classes with co-teachers and support staff in the classroom lent
to mitigated burnout. (Sandilos) While this study did take teacher responsibilities and
expectations into account, the focus was on traditional classroom teaching and the active
teaching environment as the only area in which a teacher can feel professional stress and
burnout. The proposed study will instead focus on how the multitude of responsibilities outside
Each study highlights the risk of burnout to teacher wellbeing and maintained that this is
a cause worthy of study. Each of the studies though, hasn’t looked at the number of teacher
responsibilities in addition to teaching as a possible cause for burnout. They instead have focused
on things such as limited resources, classroom management difficulties, or specific issues related
to the school and community. In each of these studies, as well, none of the expected results have
ever truly been what was initially hypothesized by the researcher. Stress, as with any
psychological phenomena, is a complex emotion with usually multiple causes that can be unique
to an individual. Regardless, this issue of “work creep” and the gradual increase in teacher
responsibility is a real issue, and one that hasn’t been studied directly thus far.
Statement of Hypothesis
There is a positive correlation between the increased number of responsibilities and the
feeling of “burn out” and decreased job satisfaction amongst educators. Responsibility number
will be defined as any task of different and separate job requirements, i.e. lesson and material
Responsibility is also subjective to the teacher due to differences in job descriptions (ie. the
content or grade level they teach) or extracurricular activities the teacher participates in, so a
strict coding will be made once all data has been collected. Burnout is defined as a feeling of
stress that leaves the teacher feeling a complete sense of exhaustion and hopelessness. The
teacher will have to meet a certain threshold on their mental health survey (specifically the
Participants
The participants of this study will be the teachers of Cockeysville Middle School, which
includes 62 members of the educational staff. This staff is predominantly female, with 68% of
teachers being female, while 32% identify as male. A large portion of the staff is Caucasian
(82%) with 12 % of the staff identifying as African American and 4% as Asian. Also, the school
has a balance of veteran (tenured) and new teachers to the profession (an almost 50/50 split).
This study will occur across three grade levels (6th through 8th grade) and include teachers from
every content department currently in the school: Social Studies, Math, English and Language
Arts, Foreign Language, Science, AVID, Fine Arts, and Physical Education. This study will
include teachers who are part of leadership, ie. grade level team leaders, but not teachers who are
content leaders such as department chairs, who have diminished teaching schedules due to
evaluation of other teachers being part of their scheduled duties. Also, this study will not include
This sampling was chosen as a convenience sampling due to the ability to organize and
institute this study with a complete population of teachers. This has its benefits and detractors.
As a benefit, this study will provide a comprehensive view of one complete school population
that can serve as a snapshot or review for the rest of the county, as it will include every member
of the teaching staff. As a detractor the school has different demographics and samples than the
rest of the middle schools in the county. While Cockeysville has a similar ratio of male to female
teachers to the rest of the county, the ratio of ethnicity is different (Cockeysville has more
Caucasian teachers than other typical schools), and Cockeysville has more veteran teachers than
other middle schools in the county. As well, the demographics of the students and neighborhood
are unique to the Cockeysville community, and will be different than other areas of the county
The MBI measures burnout in three main metrics: feelings of exhaustion, cynicism
towards their profession or workplace, and reduced professional efficacy. Furthermore, MBI
categorizes people into five categories based on their results: burnout (negative scores on all
three metrics) overextended (negative score on exhaustion only), ineffective (negative scores on
efficacy), disengaged (negative score on cynicism), and engaged (positive scores on all three).
(Maslach)
measures:
Be sure to describe what specific measures/instruments/scales you intend to use to
collect data. As part of the description, provide reliability and validity evidence to
support their use, citing sources. If you plan to use observational measures be sure
to plan to train and check agreement among observers prior to data collection, and
assess observer agreement throughout the study. If you are using interviews,
explain what questions will be used (the interview protocol), whether they will be
structured, or semi-structured, and how the interviewers will be trained.
materials:
Use this section to describe any materials used to implement the independent and
dependent variables (if quantitative or mixed-method), and any materials needed
to collect qualitative data. If there are instructional materials to be used for the
research, describe them as well. If that entails parts of the existing curriculum, then
specify that and cite the source. In your case, you may not have any materials
beyond your measures, so this section could be omitted.
procedures:
The procedures section is a description of all the tasks that the researcher and
participant must complete in order to carry out the study. This includes activities
such as obtaining consent, developing and implementing the independent variable,
securing and administering any dependent variables, analyzing data, and others.
The importance of this section is to communicate your understanding of the
logistics of your research effort and whether you have capacity to carry it out. A
reader who was judging the adequacy of your proposal would want to know that
you knew how to carry it out and had the necessary resources. Your explanation of
the procedures demonstrates that capacity and resources.
design:
The design section is where you explain what research design you will use. Is it an
experiment? A quasi-experiment? A pre-experimental, non-equivalent control group
design? A correlational design?
data analysis:
You have two tasks for this section. The first is to explain how you will describe the
data you collect to the reader. The second is to explain how you would test your
research questions using statistical analyses. You can review Patten & Galvan Part I
(5th ed.) and Mills & Gay Chapters 18 & 19 (12th ed.) for descriptions of descriptive
and inferential techniques. See Module III for more information.
Timeline: This study will be carried out over the course of the 2024-2025 school year with
References
Mota, A. I., Lopes, J., & Oliveira, C. (2023). The burnout experience among teachers:
A profile analysis. Psychology in the Schools, 60(10), 3979–3994.
https://doi.org/10.1002/pits.22956
Bottiani, J. H., Duran, C. A. K., Pas, E. T., & Bradshaw, C. P. (2019). Teacher Stress
and Burnout in Urban Middle Schools: Associations with Job Demands, Resources,
and Effective Classroom Practices. In Grantee Submission. Grantee Submission.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsp.2019.10.002
Rizvic, S. (March 13th 2023) “Teachers, facing increased levels of stress, are burned
out” New York Times, retrieved from
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/13/education/teachers-quitting-burnout.html
Hart Research Associates (2022) Under Siege, the Outlook of AFT Members,
American Federation of Teachers, retrieved from
https://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/media/2022/de-14326_aft_member_survey.pdf
Dill, K. (June 20, 2022) “Schools out for summer and many teachers are calling it
quits” Wall Street Journal, retrieved from https://www.wsj.com/articles/schools-out-
for-summer-and-many-teachers-are-calling-it-quits-11655732689
Jones, S. (2021) Teacher Stress & Burnout: The High Cost of Low Social and
Emotional Development, Southern Educators Foundation, retrieved from
https://southerneducation.org/publications/teacher-stress-and-burnout/
Sandilos, L., Goble, P., Ezra, P., & Kane, C. (2023). Head start classroom demands
and resources: Identifying associations with teacher burnout. School Psychology.
https://doi.org/10.1037/spq0000568