Working Conditions and Burnout of Special Educators of Students With EBD: Longitudinal Outcomes

Author:

Brunsting Nelson C.1ORCID,Bettini Elizabeth2,Rock Marcia3,Common Eric A.4ORCID,Royer David James5ORCID,Lane Kathleen Lynne6ORCID,Xie Fei7,Chen Aiai1,Zeng Fanyi1

Affiliation:

1. Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC, USA

2. Boston University, Boston, MA, USA

3. University of North Carolina Greensboro, USA

4. University of Michigan-Flint, USA

5. University of Louisville, KY, USA

6. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, USA

7. The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA

Abstract

Special education teacher (SET) burnout is a significant concern, especially for SETs serving students with emotional–behavioral disorders (EBD), as they tend to experience higher burnout than other teachers. Working conditions, especially social support, have the potential to ameliorate burnout, but prior research has not articulated the sources and types of social support that are most important. The authors conducted a longitudinal study, surveying 230 SETs serving students with EBD at three time points across one school year. Data revealed administrative support, adequacy of planning time, and autonomy in fall predicted emotional exhaustion and personal accomplishment in winter and spring. Associations between working conditions and burnout components were partially mediated by SETs’ perceptions of workload manageability. SET change in well-being due to COVID-19 during the early months of the pandemic was not associated with burnout. The authors discuss implications, limitations, and directions for future inquiry.

Funder

Spencer Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Education

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