Publication | Closed Access
Teacher Job Satisfaction in a Reform State: The Influence of Teacher Characteristics, Job Dimensions, and Psychological States
18
Citations
38
References
2006
Year
Job SatisfactionTeacher EducationSchool PsychologyReform StateJob DimensionsEducational PsychologyTeacher-student RelationTeacher EvaluationTeacher AttitudesEducationTeacher DevelopmentJob Diagnostic SurveyTeacher QualityEducation Policy
Despite the importance of job satisfaction, little research exists about this factor as it relates to teachers working in a school reform environment. This study addressed teacher characteristics, job dimensions, and work-related psychological states that predict public school teacher job satisfaction in a school reform state. Teachers (N = 578) completed a modified version of the Job Diagnostic Survey. Hierarchical multiple regression results indicated that the job dimension of teacher autonomy (* = .178) and the psychological states of experienced meaningfulness of the work (* = .431), experienced responsibility for the job (* = .129), and knowledge of results from the job (* = .220) explained 46% of the variance in overall teacher job satisfaction. This result greatly exceeded established criteria for a large effect size in multiple regression analysis. Implications for practice, theory, and future research are discussed.
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