TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-efficacy in classroom management, classroom disturbances, and emotional exhaustion : a moderated mediation analysis of teacher candidates
AU - Dicke, Theresa
AU - Marsh, Herbert W.
AU - Parker, Philip D.
AU - Kunter, Mareike
AU - Schmeck, Annett
AU - Leutner, Detlev
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - While the roles of student misbehavior and teacher self-efficacy in teacher burnout have been investigated, there is still a pressing need to determine the processes involved and the degree to which these generalize across early career teachers. The present research integrates findings on teacher self-efficacy, occupational stressors, and emotional exhaustion. A moderated mediation model is hypothesized where self-efficacy in classroom management predicts emotional exhaustion via classroom disturbances, but the strength of this whole mediation process is moderated by teachers' level of self-efficacy in classroom management. A sample of 1,227 German teacher candidates was used to test this hypothesis in 2 complementary studies. Study 1, based on the whole sample, utilized latent modeling and latent interactions, while Study 2 was based on a random longitudinal subsample of Study 1. The results generally supported our assumptions; the proposed moderated mediation model proved to be statistically significant, even when introducing background covariates into the model to control for pre-existing differences. Thus, self-efficacy in classroom management predicted emotional exhaustion via classroom disturbances only when self-efficacy in classroom management was low. Implications for teacher preservice training, based on the results, are discussed.
AB - While the roles of student misbehavior and teacher self-efficacy in teacher burnout have been investigated, there is still a pressing need to determine the processes involved and the degree to which these generalize across early career teachers. The present research integrates findings on teacher self-efficacy, occupational stressors, and emotional exhaustion. A moderated mediation model is hypothesized where self-efficacy in classroom management predicts emotional exhaustion via classroom disturbances, but the strength of this whole mediation process is moderated by teachers' level of self-efficacy in classroom management. A sample of 1,227 German teacher candidates was used to test this hypothesis in 2 complementary studies. Study 1, based on the whole sample, utilized latent modeling and latent interactions, while Study 2 was based on a random longitudinal subsample of Study 1. The results generally supported our assumptions; the proposed moderated mediation model proved to be statistically significant, even when introducing background covariates into the model to control for pre-existing differences. Thus, self-efficacy in classroom management predicted emotional exhaustion via classroom disturbances only when self-efficacy in classroom management was low. Implications for teacher preservice training, based on the results, are discussed.
KW - classroom management
KW - moderated mediation analysis
KW - self, efficacy
KW - teachers job stress
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:29117
UR - http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=pdh&AN=2014-01452-001&site=ehost-live&scope=site
U2 - 10.1037/a0035504
DO - 10.1037/a0035504
M3 - Article
SN - 1939-2176
SN - 0022-0663
VL - 106
SP - 569
EP - 583
JO - Journal of Educational Psychology
JF - Journal of Educational Psychology
IS - 2
ER -