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Factors Affecting Job Satisfaction and Teacher Retention for North Texas Secondary Science Teacher

Posted on:2019-08-01Degree:Ed.DType:Dissertation
University:Dallas Baptist UniversityCandidate:Miller, Chris MichaelFull Text:PDF
GTID:1477390017485217Subject:Educational leadership
Abstract/Summary:
The current mixed method study explored the job satisfaction perceptions and retention plans of 241 secondary science teachers from seven North Texas school districts. For the current study, an email questionnaire was sent to seven districts across 83 secondary campuses, which included 51 middle schools and 32 high schools. The current study intended to find reasons why secondary science teachers continue to teach or decide to leave the profession. The participants' perceptions and intentions to continue teaching were gathered through an online survey which gathered data across seven job satisfaction domains. Demographic and retention responses provided additional data on each participant. Through a quantitative analysis of Likert type survey responses and qualitative analysis of open-ended retention responses, the current study explored secondary science teachers' perceptions and intentions to stay teaching. The quantitative analysis of survey data found significant differences in almost all of the job satisfaction domains for all teachers. There were also significant differences across some demographic groups as well. Through a qualitative analysis, motivation to teach was the leading predictor for retention. On the other hand, school culture and compensation were the top reasons for teachers planning to leave the classroom.
Keywords/Search Tags:Retention, Secondary science, Job satisfaction, Teachers, Current
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