“I don’t want to come back now”: Teacher directed violence

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Issues in Educational Research

Publisher

Institutes for Educational Research

School

School of Education

RAS ID

60444

Comments

Erskine, M., Ferguson, C., & Ayre, K. (2023). “I don’t want to come back now”: Teacher directed violence. Issues in Educational Research, 33(3), 920-936. http://www.iier.org.au/iier33/erskine-abs.html

Abstract

Teacher directed violence (TDV) is characterised as damaging physical or verbal aggression directed towards teachers by students, parents, or colleagues. In this article the researchers explore the experiences of three secondary teachers in Western Australia who have experienced TDV. Given the limited sample size, this qualitative study employs an interpretative phenomenological approach that draws on attribution theory to explore employment decisions made by teachers following TDV. Semi-structured interviews focusing on the lived experiences of the participants were subjected to interpretative phenomenological analysis. The findings from the study suggest that blame; relationships; and responses and reactions felt after the incident of TDV are key factors in employment decisions. Implications are discussed in relation to teacher welfare, turnover, and attrition.

Access Rights

free_to_read

Share

 
COinS