The subject of special education teachers’ intentions to leave has been a longstanding concern of researchers and practitioners. This paper reports on a study that examined the workplace predictors of teachers’ intentions to leave for a nationally representative USA sample of 2060 secondary school special education teachers (with students aged approximately 13–18). Structural equation modeling was used to assess the plausibility of a conceptual model, specifying linkages among special education teachers’ perceptions of workplace factors, job satisfaction and commitment, and teachers’ intentions to leave. Using the 2007–2008 Schools and Staffing Survey data set, two models were tested to assess job satisfaction and commitment as mediators. Administrative support and teacher team efficacy had strong, significant direct and indirect effects on special education teachers’ intentions to leave. Teacher job design/autonomy, poor socio-economic/human conditions, and student disengagement also exerted significant indirect effects through satisfaction and commitment. However, administrative support and team efficacy were the most important for these teachers in their effects. Among several demographic variables, teacher age was the most powerful demographic factor, with more experienced teachers having lower intentions to leave. The authors suggest that several conditions and attitudes embedded in the teachers’ responses are influenced by administrators.

Adera, BA, Bullock, LM (2010) Job stressors and teacher job satisfaction in programs serving students with emotional and behavioral disorders. Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties 15(1): 514.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Albrecht, SF, Johns, B, Mounsteven, J, Olorunda, O (2009) Working conditions as risk or resiliency factors for teachers of students with emotional and behavioral disabilities. Psychology in the Schools 46: 10061022. DOI: 10.1002/pits.20440.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Bacharach, SB, Bamberger, P, Conley, S (1990) Work processes, role conflict, and role overload: The case of nurses and engineers in the public sector. Work and Occupations 17(2): 199228.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Bacharach, SB, Bauer, SC, Conley, S (1986) Organizational analysis of stress: The case of elementary and secondary schools. Work and Occupations 13(1): 732.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Berry, AB (2012) The relationship of perceived support to satisfaction and commitment for special education teachers in rural areas. Rural Special Education Quarterly 31(1): 314.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals
Berry, AB, Petrin, RA, Gravelle, ML, Farmer, TW (2011) Issues in special education teacher recruitment, retention, and professional development: Considerations in supporting rural teachers. Rural Special Education Quarterly 30(4): 311.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals
Billingsley, BS (1993) Teacher retention and attrition in special and general education: A critical review of the literature. The Journal of Special Education 27(2): 137174.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Billingsley, BS (2004a) Special education teacher retention and attrition: A critical analysis of the research literature. The Journal of Special Education 38(1): 3955.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Billingsley, BS (2004b) Promoting teacher quality and retention in special education. Journal of Learning Disabilities 37(5): 370376.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Billingsley, BS, Cross, LH (1991) Teachers’ decisions to transfer from special to general education. The Journal of Special Education 24(4): 496511.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Billingsley, BS, Cross, LH (1992) Predictors of commitment, job satisfaction and intent to stay in teaching: A comparison of general and special educators. The Journal of Special Education 25(4): 453471.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Billingsley, BS, Bodkins, D, Hendricks, MB (1993) Why special educators leave teaching: Implications for administrators. Case in Point 7(2), 2338.
Google Scholar
Billingsley, B, Pyecha, J, Smith-Davis, J, Murray, K, Hendricks, MB (1995) Improving the retention of special education teachers. Final report, Prepared for Office of Special Education Programs, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, US Department of Education, under Cooperative Agreement H023Q10001. ERIC Document Reproduction Service no. ED379860.
Google Scholar
Boe, EE, Barkanic, G, Leow, CS (1999) Retention and attrition of teachers at the school level: National trends and predictors. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, Graduate School of Education, Center for Research and Evaluation in Social Policy. ERIC Documentation Reproduction Service no. ED436485.
Google Scholar
Boe, EE, Bobbitt, SA, Cook, LH (1997) Why didst thou go? Predictors of retention, transfer, and attrition of special and general education teachers from a national perspective. The Journal of Special Education 30(4): 390411.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Boe, EE, Cook, LH, Sunderland, RJ (2008) Teacher turnover: Examining exit attrition, teaching area transfer, and school migration. Exceptional Children 75(1): 731.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Bogler, R, Nir, AE (2015) The contribution of perceived fit between job demands and abilities to teachers’ commitment and job satisfaction. Educational Management Administration & Leadership 43(4): 541560.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Brownell, MT, Smith, SW (1992) Attrition/retention of special education teachers: Critique of current research and recommendations for retention efforts. Teacher Education and Special Education 15(4): 229248.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals
Cancio, EJ, Albrecht, SF, Johns, BH (2013) Defining administrative support and its relationship to the attrition of teachers of students with emotional and behavioral disorders. Education and Treatment of Children 36(4): 7194.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Collinson, V (2012) Leading by learning, learning by leading. Professional Development in Education 38(2): 247266.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Collinson, V, Cook, TF (2007) Organizational Learning: Improving Learning Teaching and Leading in School Systems. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications.
Google Scholar
Conley, S, You, S (2009) Teacher role stress, satisfaction, commitment, and intentions to leave: A structural model. Psychological Reports 105(3): 771786.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Cross, LH, Billingsley, BS (1994) Testing a model of special educators’ intent to stay in teaching. Exceptional Children 60(5): 411421.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Day, C, Elliot, B, Kington, A (2005) Reform, standards and teacher identity: Challenges of sustaining commitment. Teaching and Teacher Education 21(5): 563577.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Dee, JR, Henkin, AB, Singleton, CA (2006) Organizational commitment of teachers in urban schools: Examining the effects of team structures. Urban Education 41(6): 603627.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Dwyer, DJ, Schwartz, RH, Fox, ML (1992) Decision-making autonomy in nursing. Journal of Nursing Administration 22(2): 1723.
Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | ISI
Eichinger, J (2000) Job stress and satisfaction among special education teachers: Effects of gender and social role orientation. International Journal of Disability, Development and Education 47(4): 397412.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Elangovan, AR (2001) Causal ordering of stress, satisfaction and commitment, and intention to quit: A structural equations analysis. Leadership & Organizational Development Journal 22(4): 159165.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Firestone, WA (1996) Images of teaching and proposals for reform: A comparison of ideas from cognitive and organizational research. Educational Administration Quarterly 32(2): 209235.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Fore, C, Martin, C, Bender, WN (2002) Teacher burnout in special education: The causes and the recommended solutions. The High School Journal 86: 3644.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Gehrke, RS, Murri, N (2006) Beginning special educators’ intent to stay in special education: Why they like it here. Teacher Education and Special Education: The Journal of the Teacher Education Division of the Council for Exceptional Children 29(3): 179190.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals
George, NL, George, MP, Gersten, R, Grosenick, JR (1995) To leave or to stay? An exploratory study of teachers of students with emotional and behavioral disorders. Remedial and Special Education 16: 227236.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Gersten, R, Keating, T, Yovanoff, P, Harniss, MK (2001) Working in special education: Factors that enhance special educators’ intent to stay. Exceptional Children 67: 549567.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Glisson, C, Durick, M (1988) Predictors of job satisfaction and organizational commitment in human service organizations. Administrative Science Quarterly 33: 6181.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Hackman, JR, Oldham, GR (1976) Motivation through the design of work: Test of a theory. Organizational Behavior and Human Performance 16(2): 250279.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Hackman, JR, Oldham, GR (1980) Work Redesign. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
Google Scholar
Hackman, JR, Oldham, G, Janson, R, Purdy, K (1975) A new strategy for job enrichment. California Management Review 17(4): 5771.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Herzberg, F (2001) One more time: How do you motivate employees? In: Natemeyer, WE, McMahon, JT (eds) Classics of Organizational Behavior. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press, pp. 102116.
Google Scholar
Hu, L, Bentler, PM (1999) Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis: Conventional criteria versus new alternatives. Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal 6(1): 155.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Ingersoll, RM (2001) Teacher turnover and teacher shortages: An organizational analysis. American Educational Research Journal 38(3): 499534.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Kaff, MS (2004) Multitasking is multi-taxing: Why special educators are leaving the field. Preventing School Failure 48(2): 1017.
Google Scholar
Kelleher, F (2011) Women and the Teaching Profession: Exploring the Feminisation Debate. London and Paris: Commonwealth Secretariat and United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
Google Scholar
Lachman, R, Diamant, E (1987) Withdrawal and restraining factors in teachers’ turnover intentions. Journal of Occupational Behavior 8(3): 219232.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Littrell, PC, Billingsley, BS, Cross, LH (1994) The effects of principal support on special and general educators’ stress, job satisfaction, school commitment, health, and intent to stay in teaching. Remedial and Special Education 15(5): 297310.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Locke, EA (1976) The nature and causes of job satisfaction. In: Dunnette, MD (ed.) Handbook of Industrial and Organizational Psychology. Chicago: Rand McNally, pp. 12971349.
Google Scholar
Louis, KS, Kruse, SD, Bryk, AS (1995) Professionalism and community: What is it and why is it important in urban schools? In: Louis, KS, Kruse, SD (eds) Professionalism and Community: Perspectives on Reforming Urban Schools. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin.
Google Scholar
Major, AE (2012) Job design for special education teachers. Current Issues in Education 15(2): 17.
Google Scholar
Mayrowetz, D, Smylie, MA (2004) Work redesign that works for teachers. Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education 103(1): 274302.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Menon, ME (2012) Do beginning teachers receive adequate support from their headteachers? Educational Management Administration & Leadership 40(2): 217231.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Metzke, LK (1988) A Study of the Causes of Teacher Attrition in Regular and Special Education in Wisconsin (Doctoral dissertation, Marquette University). Dissertation Abstracts International, 50, 42A. Available at: http://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations/AA18904275 (accessed 1 March 2016).
Google Scholar
Meyer, JP, Allen, NJ (1991) A three-component conceptualization of organizational commitment. Human Resource Management Review 1(1): 6189.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Meyer, JP, Jackson, TA, Maltin, ER (2008) Commitment in the workplace: Past, present and future. Sage Handbook of Organizational Behavior 1: 3553.
Google Scholar
Miller, D, Brownell, M, Smith, S (1999) Factors that predict teachers staying in, leaving, or transferring from the special education classroom. Exceptional Children 65: 201218.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Mohrman, AM, Cooke, RA, Mohrman, SA (1978) Participation in decision making: A multidimensional perspective. Educational Administration Quarterly 14(1): 1329.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Morvant, M, Gersten, R, Gillman, J, Keating, T, Blake, G (1995) Attrition/retention of urban special education teachers: Multi-faceted research and strategic action planning. Final performance report, vol. 1. Eugene Research Inst. OREGON. ERIC Document Reproduction Service no. ED 389 154.
Google Scholar
Mowday, RT, Porter, LM, Steers, RM (1982) Employee–Organization Linkages: The Psychology of Commitment, Absenteeism, and Turnover. New York: Academic Press.
Google Scholar
Moynihan, DP, Pandey, SK (2007) Finding workable levers over work motivation: Comparing job satisfaction, job involvement, and organizational commitment. Administration and Society 39(7): 803832.
Google Scholar
Mueller, CW, Wallace, JE, Price, JL (1992) Employee commitment: Resolving some issues. Work and Occupations 19(3): 211236.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) (n.d.) Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS). Available at: http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/sass/
Google Scholar
Oldham, GR, Hackman, JR (2010) Not what it was and not what it will be: The future of job design research. Journal of Organizational Behavior 31(2/3): 463479.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Pounder, DG (1999) Teacher teams: Exploring job characteristics and work related outcomes of work group enhancement. Educational Administration Quarterly 35(3): 317348.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Prather-Jones, B (2011) How school administrators influence the retention of teachers of students with emotional and behavioral disorders. The Clearing House 84: 18. DOI: 10.1080/00098655.2010.489387.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Rice, CJ, Goessling, DP (2005) Recruiting and retaining male special education teachers. Remedial and Special Education 26(6): 347356.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Rosenholtz, SJ, Simpson, C (1990) Workplace factors and the rise and fall of teachers’ commitment. Sociology of Education 63(4): 241257.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Sari, H (2004) An analysis of burnout and job satisfaction among Turkish special school headteachers and teachers, and the factors affecting their burnout and satisfaction. Educational Studies 30(3): 291306.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Schlichte, J, Yssel, N, Merbler, J (2005) Pathways to burnout: Case studies in teacher isolation and alienation. Preventing School Failure 50: 3540.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Sclan, EM (1993) The effect of perceived workplace factors on beginning teachers’ work commitment, career choice commitment, and planned retention. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York.
Google Scholar
Shyman, E (2011) Examining mutual elements of the job strain model and the effort-reward imbalance model among special education staff in the USA. Educational Management Administration & Leadership 39(3): 349363.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Singer, JD (1993) Are special educators’ career paths special? Reports from a 13-year longitudinal study. Exceptional Children 59: 262279.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Steiger, JH, Lind, JM (1980 6) Statistically based tests for the number of common factors. Paper presented at the Annual Spring Meeting of the Psychometric Society. Iowa City, IA.
Google Scholar
Stempien, LR, Loeb, RC (2002) Differences in job satisfaction between general education and special education teachers. Remedial and Special Education 23(5): 258267.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Weiss, EM (1999) Perceived workplace conditions and first-year teachers’ morale, career choice commitment, and planned retention: A secondary analysis. Teaching and Teacher Education 15: 361879.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Whitaker, SD (2000) Mentoring beginning special education teachers and the relationship to attrition. Exceptional Children 66(4): 546566.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
Williams, LJ, Hazer, JT (1986) Antecedents and consequences of satisfaction and commitment in turnover models: A reanalysis using latent variable structural equation methods. Journal of Applied Psychology 71(2): 219231.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
You, S, Conley, S (2015) Workplace predictors of secondary school teachers’ intention to leave: An exploration of career stages. Educational Management Administration & Leadership 43(4): 561581.
Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI
View access options

My Account

Welcome
You do not have access to this content.



Chinese Institutions / 中国用户

Click the button below for the full-text content

请点击以下获取该全文

Institutional Access

does not have access to this content.

Purchase Content

24 hours online access to download content

Your Access Options


Purchase

EMA-article-ppv for $36.00

Article available in:

Related Articles