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Feeling and Acting like a Teacher: Reconceptualizing Teachers’ Emotional Labor

Authors :
Christy Galletta Horner
Swati Mehta
Elizabeth Levine Brown
Christina L. Scanlon
Source :
Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education. 122:1-36
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2020.

Abstract

Background/ContextEmpirical research indicates that teachers across ages and academic contexts regularly engage in emotional labor, and this emotional labor contributes to their job satisfaction, teaching effectiveness, burnout, and emotional well-being both within and outside the classroom. However, because the initial research on emotional labor was situated in the service industries (e.g., restaurants, call centers, airlines), researchers have suggested that the emotional labor framework as it applies to teaching only provides a partial picture of teachers’ deeper and more complex emotional practice.Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of StudyThis study aims to determine whether and how teachers’ descriptions of their own emotional practice map onto existing emotional labor constructs (emotional display rules, and deep and surface acting) and how the framework may be adapted to better support teachers’ implementation of emotional labor.SettingParticipants worked in five charter schools within the same school district but in different areas of a mid-Atlantic metropolitan city. This district identifies itself as serving 4,000 students from “underserved communities” across 13 locations.Population/Participants/SubjectsFull-time K–12 educators (N = 68) who worked across academic subjects (e.g., math, science, language arts) or special subjects (e.g., music, art) participated.Research DesignThe current study is qualitative; we employed adapted grounded theory.Data Collection and AnalysisWe conducted individual face-to-face semistructured interviews with participants; audio recordings were transcribed verbatim. We developed a codebook through a collaborative and iterative process, and we achieved high interrater reliability before using Dedoose to code the full corpus of data.Findings/ResultsThere were two key findings: (1) teachers perceived feeling rules in addition to display rules, and (2) teachers described an emotional acting strategy in which they modulated the expressions of their authentic emotions, which we call modulated acting, in addition to surface and deep acting.Conclusions/RecommendationsIncluding teachers’ perceptions of feeling rules and use of modulated acting in emotional labor research has the potential to enhance our understanding of how emotional labor relates to outcomes that are important for both teachers and their students. In addition, we urge teacher educators to include emotional labor in their curricula. Though further research is needed to build a strong literature base on ways in which teachers’ emotional labor may connect to their own and their students’ outcomes, the emotional labor constructs already have the potential to be useful for both preservice and practicing teachers.

Details

ISSN :
14679620 and 01614681
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1c30b75f6d4f4b963604876a7ca50df7