Knowing What to Do: School Focus, Teacher Morale, and Teacher Turnover
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Abstract
This study explored how schools’ focus – the collective perception among teachers of
clarity and consistency regarding school goals, expectations, and priorities – related
to schoolwide morale and school turnover rates. I examined the hypothesis that focus
attenuates the deleterious effects of student misconduct on teacher morale and the
contributory role of student misconduct leading to teacher turnover. In addition, I
examined climate strength regarding perceptions school focus as an indicator of focus
itself, as well a potential moderating effect of climate strength on the magnitude of
school focus-school morale and school focus-turnover relationships. Data from a
national sample of middle and high schools (N schools = 348, N teachers = 11,376)
were analyzed using school-level multiple regression models. Schools with higher
focus had significantly higher morale, independent of related perceptions of
administrative leadership. No significant relationship was found between school focus
and school turnover rates. The hypothesized moderating effect of focus on student
misconduct and morale was not supported, though there was a significant indication
that focus attenuated the positive relationship between student misconduct and
turnover. Climate strength of school focus ratings significantly correlated with focus
scores, but did not moderate relationships between focus and predicted outcomes.
Findings suggest that school-level focus does represent a characteristic of schools that
has a meaningful positive relationship with teacher morale but do not necessarily
clarify how that relationship manifests in schools or if that relationship presents an
avenue for intervention.