Early Childhood Education Teacher Well-Being: Performativity as a Means of Coping

被引:2
作者
Wiltshire, Cynthia A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas El Paso, Coll Educ, Dept Teacher Educ, 500 W Univ Ave, El Paso, TX 79968 USA
关键词
teacher stress; teacher warmth; CLASS; performativity; COVID-19; HEAD-START; CLASSROOM; PRESCHOOL; STRESS; CARE; INTERVENTION; ASSOCIATIONS; ACHIEVEMENT; ATTACHMENT; CHILDREN;
D O I
10.1007/s10643-022-01387-2
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Detrimental circumstances (e.g., poverty, homelessness) may affect parents, parenting, and children. These circumstances may lead to children being labeled "at risk" for school failure. To ameliorate this risk, more school and school earlier (e.g., Head Start) is offered. To improve child outcomes, Head Start teachers are expected to bolster children?s academic readiness in a manner that is beneficially warm, circulating warmth in their classrooms to sustain positive teacher-child relationships and the positive climate of the classroom. The Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS; Pianta et al., 2008) is one tool by which these domains of warmth are assessed. There are, however, significant personal and professional stressors with which Head Start teachers contend which the CLASS (Pianta et al., 2008) does not consider in its scoring methods. Uplifting the voices of six Head Start teachers, the present study implemented individual and focus group interviews during the summer and fall months of 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, asking (a) What were the stories, histories, and lived experiences of these Head Start teachers with regard to stress and warmth in a time of crisis? and (b) How did these teachers understand and approach the CLASS (Pianta et al., 2008) and its measures of their warmth? Data demonstrated Head Start teachers engaged in a type of performativity to 1) mask their stress, potentially worsening their levels of stress in order to maintain warmth for their students' sake, and 2) outwit the prescribed CLASS (Pianta et al., 2008) observations. Implications and insights are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:1385 / 1399
页数:15
相关论文
共 123 条
  • [81] Montgomery C., 2005, CAN J EDUC, V28, P458
  • [82] Morgan DL., 1997, FOCUS GROUP QUALITAT, V2, DOI DOI 10.4135/9781412984287
  • [83] Quality of Classroom Interactions and the Demographic Divide: Evidence From the Measures of Effective Teaching Study
    Osei-Twumasi, Olivia
    Pinetta, Bernardette J.
    [J]. URBAN EDUCATION, 2023, 58 (05) : 899 - 930
  • [84] Investigating Bidirectional Links Between the Quality of Teacher-Child Relationships and Children's Interest and Pre-Academic Skills in Literacy and Math
    Pakarinen, Eija
    Lerkkanen, Marja-Kristiina
    Viljaranta, Jaana
    von Suchodoletz, Antje
    [J]. CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 92 (01) : 388 - 407
  • [85] The Early Care and Education Workforce
    Phillips, Deborah
    Austin, Lea J. E.
    Whitebook, Marcy
    [J]. FUTURE OF CHILDREN, 2016, 26 (02) : 139 - 158
  • [86] First do no harm: How teachers support or undermine children's self-regulation
    Phillips, Deborah A.
    Hutchison, Jane
    Martin, Anne
    Castle, Sherri
    Johnson, Anna D.
    [J]. EARLY CHILDHOOD RESEARCH QUARTERLY, 2022, 59 : 172 - 185
  • [87] Structural Violence of Schooling: A Genealogy of a Critical Family History of Three Generations of African American Women in a Rural Community in Florida
    Phillips, Evelyn Newman
    Gichiru, Wangari
    [J]. GENEALOGY, 2021, 5 (01)
  • [88] Pianta R.C., 2003, Handbook of Psychology, P199, DOI [10.1002/0471264385.wei0710, DOI 10.1002/0471264385.WEI0710]
  • [89] Pianta R.C., 2003, Standardized classroom observation from pre-k to third grade: A mechanism for improving quality classroom experiences during the P-3 years
  • [90] Pianta R. C., 2008, Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS) Manual, Pre-K