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Work Pressures Stemming From School Authorities and Burnout Among Physical Education Teachers: The Mediating Role of Psychological Needs Thwarting

Authors

FRANCO ÁLVAREZ, EVELIA, Cuevas, Ricardo , Coteron, Javier , Spray, Christopher

External publication

Si

Means

J. Teach. Phys. Educ.

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

2.8

SJR Impact

0.931

Publication date

01/01/2022

ISI

000733373800013

Abstract

Purpose: To examine the role of psychological need thwarting in mediating physical education teachers' work pressures stemming from school authorities and burnout. Method: A total of 345 physical education teachers (M=47.46; SD= 8.79) completed some online validated questionnaires. Results: Structural equation modeling first revealed that pressures from school authorities predicted needs thwarting which, in turn, predicted burnout. In a second model, in which burnout was deemed as a multidimensional construct, autonomy and competence thwarting was found to predict both emotional exhaustion and depersonalization. Discussion: These findings suggest that when teachers find themselves pressured by school authorities to act in certain way, they are more likely to feel more exhausted and to adopt more cynical attitudes toward their students due to the thwarting of their basic needs. Practical implications related to school and national policies are discussed. Conclusion: External pressures affect PE teachers' emotional states and educational policies should address this issue.

Keywords

basic psychological needs; ill-being; self-determination theory; structural equation modeling

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