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Public school accountability,workplace culture,and teacher morale
Institution:1. Europa-Universität Flensburg, Department of Methodology, Auf dem Campus 1a, 24943 Flensburg, Germany;2. WZB Berlin Social Science Center, Germany;3. City, University of London, United Kingdom;4. Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany;5. German Centre of Gerontology (DZA), Germany;1. School of Accounting, RMIT University, GPO Box 2476V, Melbourne, Victoria, 3001, Australia;2. School of Accountancy, QUT, Brisbane, QLD, 4000, Australia;1. Assistant Professor of Education Graduate School of Education University of Pennsylvania 3700 Walnut Street, 408 Philadelphia, PA 19104 United States;2. Postdoctoral Fellow University of Pennsylvania United States;3. Professor of Criminology and Sociology Department of Criminology University of Pennsylvania 483 McNeil Building, 3718 Locust Walk Philadelphia, PA 19104 United States;1. Clemson University, United States;2. Arizona State University, United States
Abstract:Educational scholars claim that teacher morale has suffered from accountability pressures and constrained professionalism, but exactly what is most diminished by these pressures remains unclear. Drawing on recent theoretical work on public school organizational culture, we hypothesize that accountability pressures hurt teacher morale and increase the risk of turnover by undermining the professional culture of the school and by diminishing teacher cooperation and trust. We find support for this hypothesis in a national sample of teachers in 2011–12, and a follow-up survey from 2012–13. The analyses test whether a collective pedagogical teacher culture, comprised of professional culture and teacher collaboration, buffers the impact of these pressures that diminish teacher morale. Counter to past research, we find that a strong collective pedagogical teacher culture does not buffer teachers from the ill effects of negative workplace conditions in the form of accountability pressures. We also find that accountability pressures in the form of district dismissals are associated with a higher likelihood of teachers leaving their school, and this relationship is not mitigated by strong professional culture. We conclude that accountability pressures partly undermine goals of improving performance and equity in public schools by sowing seeds of teacher dissatisfaction and contributing to teacher turnover, thus thwarting student achievement in struggling schools.
Keywords:Teacher morale  Teacher turnover  Workplace culture  Working conditions  School accountability
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