Early Childhood Special Education Teachers' Job Burnout and Psychological Stress

Early Educ Dev. 2022;33(8):1364-1382. doi: 10.1080/10409289.2021.1965395. Epub 2021 Aug 24.

Abstract

Research findings: All teachers have demanding jobs and work with limited resources. However, working with young children with disabilities may place additional demands on early childhood special education (ECSE) teachers which may impact their well-being. Using the Job Demands and Resources model, the present study aimed to predict ECSE teachers' job burnout and psychological stress by using their job demands, job resources, and professional internal resources. An online survey was collected from 121 ECSE teachers from a large urban school district in a Western state of the United States. The results showed that job demands (work-related stressors) were positively associated with teachers' job burnout and psychological stress. Job resources (sense of school community) were negatively associated with their job burnout and psychological stress. Teachers' job commitment was negatively associated with job burnout. Though their other internal resources (beliefs about developmentally appropriate practices and teaching-efficacy) were not related to their job burnout and psychological stress, their beliefs about social emotional learning were positively related to job burnout.

Practice or policy: These findings offer implications for research and practice regarding the importance of improving ECSE teachers' well-being and working conditions.

Keywords: Early childhood special education teacher; internal resources; job burnout; job demands; job resources; psychological stress; teacher well-being.