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A National Study of the Mistreated Teacher

Jo Blase, Joseph Blase, & Du Fengning
The University of Georgia
2006

Purposes

The purposes of the current study were to identify American school teachers’ perceptions of the major sources and intensity of the experience of mistreatment by a principal; to identify the effects of such mistreatment; to determine if perceptions of mistreatment vary by demographic variables; to identify teachers’ coping skills, and to describe teachers’ perceptions of contributing factors.

Research Questions
  1. What levels of harm from principal mistreatment do teachers perceive?
  2. How do teachers cope with principal mistreatment?
  3. What are the perceived effects of principal mistreatment? Do teachers of various demographic backgrounds report different effects from principal mistreatment?
  4. What are the frequencies and intensities of harm of specific principal mistreatment behaviors for the participants? Do teachers of various demographic backgrounds perceive different levels of frequency and intensity of harm from specific principal mistreatment behaviors?
  5. What are the most harmful principal mistreatment behaviors for teachers of various demographic variables?
  6. What are teachers’ perceptions of factors that contribute to principal mistreatment?
Method

Results

Approximately 70% of participants were female and 30% were male; 88% were White, 6% were African American, 7% were other or unknown; half worked with union contracts and half worked with non-union contracts; 2% were under age 25, 16% were age 25-29, 31% were age 30-39, 29% were age 40-49, 20% were age 50-59, and 2% were age 60 and over. Approximately 37% of the participants had Bachelors degrees, 49% had Masters, 10% had Specialists, and 2% had Doctorates. About 15% of the participants had 1-3 years of teaching experience, 36% had 4-9 years of experience, 33% had 10-19 years of experience, and 13% had 20 or more years of experience. Participants’ school levels were elementary (35%), middle/junior high (29%), and senior high (34%, including vocational and alternative schools). Thus, participants in the survey were predominately female, white, equally likely to have union or non-union contracts, aged 30-50, held a master’s degree, had 9-20 years of teaching experience and were equally likely to work at the elementary, middle/junior high, or high school level (See Table 1).

In response to the question, “For how long did the mistreatment continue?” 15.7% of the research participants indicated 1-5 months, 16.9% reported 6-12 months and 40.1% and 25.6% reported 1-3 years and over 3 years respectively.

Harm

This suggests that principal mistreatment should be considered one of life’s most harmful stressors for public school teachers and that, in general, administrative mistreatment may be one of life’s most harmful stressors for victims in other occupations.

Leaving the Job

This percentage of teachers willing to relinquish their chosen careers, clearly a “last resort” coping strategy, underscores the overwhelming deleterious effects of principal mistreatment on teachers and teaching; this is particularly ominous in light of current and predicted teacher shortages.

Coping Strategies

These findings indicate that mistreated teachers typically did not enact problem-focused coping strategies; instead, they employed passive (i.e., adaptive) strategies (e.g., avoiding, talking with others, rationalizing the principal’s mistreatment) to ameliorate the emotional effects of abusive treatment. This is consistent with what has been reported by other researchers studying workplace mistreatment. It is encouraging that only a small percentage of teachers in our study engaged in maladaptive coping strategies; that is, strategies designed to provide “quick fixes” to ameliorate adverse feelings (e.g., alcohol, drug use) but which often result in longer term health consequences. Findings about teachers’ passive (but not maladaptive) strategies for coping with mistreatment are consistent with (and yet provide much more detail than) our earlier study of long term principal mistreatment of teachers (Blase & Blase, 2002, 2003a, 2003b).

Principal Mistreatment Behaviors


Participants in our study were frequently subjected to a diverse range of abusive principal mistreatment behaviors, many of which have been reported in the general workplace mistreatment research literature although abusive principals occasionally used indirect and passive mistreatment behaviors, they generally relied on active, direct, and verbal/nonverbal behaviors. It may be that the substantial power disparity between principals and teachers and the lack of societal understanding of the mistreatment problems in the US and specifically in public school administration accounts for principals’ brazen use of active and direct forms of teacher mistreatment/abuse.

A comparison of our study’s top ten most frequently reported principal mistreatment behaviors with the top ten behaviors described in other workplace mistreatment studies reveals several similarities: behaviors such as fails to praise or recognize me for work-related achievements, ignoring and/or snubbing me, and nitpicking or micromanaging me also appeared in the top ten most frequently encountered behaviors in other studies (i.e., Ellis, 2006; Glomb, 2002; Harlos & Axelrod, 2005; Hoel & Cooper, 2000; Keashly, 2002; Neuman & Baron, 1998; Salin, 2001). Interestingly, favoritism toward others was ranked second in terms of frequency in our study; however, this behavior did not appear in the top ten most frequently reported behaviors of other mistreatment studies. Perhaps teachers, in contrast to other professional workers, react more strongly to violations of “fairness” norms (Blase, 1988; Lortie, 1975). Further, most of the aforementioned mistreatment studies identified yelling/shouting and/or swearing among the top ten mistreatment behaviors. Fortunately, explosive/nasty behavior was ranked 28th in the present study and was reported by only 25.6% of our research participants.

Intensity of Harm from Mistreatment Behaviors


Effects of Mistreatment


Similar to national and international studies identified earlier, our research participants experienced a wide range of harmful psychological/emotional, physical/physiological, and work-related effects (e.g., Blase & Blase, 2002, 2003a, 2003b; Irish Taskforce on the Prevention of Workplace Bullying, 2001; Keashly & Jagatic, 2000; WBTI, 2003; Queensland Government Workplace Bullying Taskforce, 2002), with over 64% experiencing the 10 highest ranked effects. In addition, over 50% experienced fear and dread, decreases in self-esteem and work motivation, and depression. Such adverse effects are similar to findings of our earlier study (Blase & Blase (2002, 2003a, 2003b) with one exception: in the earlier study, a substantial number of the abused teachers also suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), possibly because that research sample consisted of a select group of teachers who had been victims of severe, repeated, long term principal mistreatment (6 months - 9 years); in the current study, in contrast, fewer (21%) research participants indicated that they had been “severely” abused.

Consistent with our earlier study and the aforementioned review, considerable negative effects on teachers’ work performance were identified in the current study, with nearly 80% of participants reporting that principal mistreatment substantially undermined their teaching. More specifically, one third of our research participants reported adverse effects for various items related directly to classroom teaching such as: lowered self-motivation for teaching; I was less creative, innovative, and less likely to take risks in teaching; I experienced stress, paranoia, insecurity, fear, dread, self-doubt, and/or lowered self-motivation with regard to my classroom teaching; my relationship with students suffered; I felt less caring, patience, tolerance, or humor toward students; I felt forced to use rigid, authoritarian dated or ineffective teaching methods.

Factors Contributing to Mistreatment

Factors participants believed contributed to their mistreatment were school-level politics (61% of participants); teacher’s age (34.9%); teacher’s gender (24.4%); teacher’s race (14%); teacher’s religion (12.8%); teacher’s affiliation with a union or association (12.8%); teacher’s political beliefs (11.6%); teacher’s health, illness, or disability (11%); teacher’s ethnicity (9.9%); and teacher’s sexual orientation (2.9%).
Demographic Differences

ANOVA tests determined differences among teachers of various demographic categories for several variables.



Part II. A Review of the Scholarly Literature on Workplace Mistreatment/Abuse
Jo Blase & Joseph Blase
The University of Georgia
2006

Prevalence of Workplace Mistreatment/Abuse

Public school teachers are among the high risk occupations for mistreatment/abuse (across occupations in Great Britain [Hoel & Cooper, 2000], Sweden [Leymann, 1992], Norway [Matthiesen, Raknes, & Rokkum, 1989], Ireland [Irish Taskforce on the Prevention of Workplace Bullying, 2001], and Australia [Queensland Government Workplace Bullying Taskforce, 2002]
Prominent websites in the world devoted to workplace mistreatment

Definitions of Workplace Mistreatment/Abuse

Terms:

Administrator (superior, boss) mistreatment/abuse of subordinates:

Abusive Administrators

  1. Administrators (vs. co-workers) are the primary workplace abusers between 50% and 90% of the time (e.g., ACTU, 2000a, 2001; Brodsky, 1976; Bjorkvist et al., 1994; Canada Safety Council, 2006; Einarsen & Skogstad, 1996; Hoel & Cooper, 2000; Hornstein, 1996; Irish Taskforce on the Prevention of Workplace Bullying, 2001; Keashly, Trott, & MacLean, 1994; Namie & Namie, 2000; NNLI, 1993; Pearson, 2000; Rayner, 1998; Workplace Bullying and Trauma Institute [WBTI], 2003; Zapf, 1999).
  2. US rates of abuse by superiors may exceed European countries (due to power inequalities that render subordinates unable to adequately defend themselves [Keashly, 2002] and “power distance” [Hofstede, 1980] (i.e., the degree to which organizational cultures enhance an administrator’s absolute power over employees; US is high power distance country--administrators are “superiors” not to be challenged (Keashly, 2002).
  3. Link to the development of administrative cultures that directly or indirectly permit or reward such abuse (e.g., Ashforth, 1994; Blase & Blase, 2002, 2003a, 2003b; Brodsky, 1976; Grubb, Roberts, Grosch, & Brightwell, 2004; Hornstein, 1996; Jennifer, Cowie, & Ananiadou, 2003; Leymann, 1990).
  4. Study of abuse of power/potential for abuse of power by organizational superiors is well-established in the social sciences (e.g., Adams and Balfour, 1998; Baumeister, 1996; Katz, 1993; Kekes, 1990; Kets de Vries, 1989; Kipnis, 1972; Lee-Chai & Bargh, 2001; Lombardo & McCall, 1984; Milgram, 1974; Winter, 1973).
  5. Little attention has been given to the dark side of organizational life in either the management literature (Ashforth, 1994; Yukl, 2001) or the educational administration literature (Blase & Blase, 2002, 2003a, 2003b; Hodgkinson, 1991; Kimbrough, 1985; Starratt, 1991).
  6. Coleman (2004) concluded that “…something approaching a ‘scholarly taboo’ may explain the neglect of workplace bullying” (p. 310).

Abusive Behaviors

  1. Verbal forms of mistreatment/abuse: scapegoating, threats (e.g., of job loss, of poor evaluations), put downs, belittling, false accusations, swearing, yelling, angry outbursts, name calling, public humiliation, criticism (i.e., excessive and/or unfounded criticism about work abilities or personal life), gossiping, spreading false rumors, blaming, sexual harassment, racial harassment, deceit, dishonesty, favoritism, unfair evaluations, unwarranted reprimands, stonewalling, taking credit for another’s accomplishments, unreasonable assignments, excessive monitoring/micromanagement, dismissing another’s thoughts/feelings, implying a master-servant relationship, unfair job references, undermining advancement, imposing unreasonable deadlines, unfair reassignments or terminations, and obstructing opportunities for professional development.
  2. Nonverbal forms of mistreatment/abuse: ignoring, snubbing, aggressive eye contact (e.g., staring, “the silent treatment”, dirty looks), spying, and physical gestures (e.g., foot stomping, finger pointing, throwing and /or slamming objects, and violations of physical space).
  3. Physical forms of mistreatment/abuse: exclusion and/or isolation, withholding needed resources/conspiring with others to withhold needed resources, theft, and destruction of property (Ashforth, 1994; ACTU, 2000b; Baron & Neuman, 1996; Bjorkvist et al., 1994; Blase & Blase, 2002, 2003a, 2003b; Brodsky, 1976; Davenport, Distler-Schwartz, & Pursell-Elliott, 1999; External Advisory Committee on the Defence Forces, 2002; Glomb, 2002; Harlos & Axelrod, 2005; Harlos & Pinder, 2000; Hoel & Cooper, 2000; Hornstein, 1996; Irish Taskforce in the Prevention of Workplace Bullying, 2001; Keashly & Jagatic, 2000; Keashly, 2001; Keashly & Rogers, 2001; Keashly et al., 1994; Leymann, 1990; Lombardo & McCall, 1984; Namie, 2000; Namie & Namie, 2000; Neuman & Baron, 1998; Price-Spratlen, 1995; Queensland Government Workplace Bullying Taskforce, 2002; Robinson & Bennett, 1995; Ryan & Oestreich, 1991, 1998; Salin, 2001; Stern, 2004; WBTI, 2003; Westhues, 1998, 2004).

Effects of Abuse

  1. psychological/emotional health: reduced job satisfaction; negative feelings (e.g., desperation, incompetence, inadequacy, embarrassment, guilt, shame, self-doubt, loneliness, powerlessness); loss of concentration; obsessive thinking/intrusive thoughts; distrust; cynicism; anxiety; emotional exhaustion; compulsivity; burnout; disorientation; shock; chronic fear; socio-phobia; panic attacks; hypervigilance; depression; generalized anxiety disorder; suicidal thoughts; and post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
  2. hysical/physiological health: hair loss, back and neck pain, headaches/migraines, skin disorders, racing heart rate, loss of strength, significant weight changes (loss/gain), ulcers, chest pain, chronic fatigue syndrome, high blood pressure, angina, irritable bowel syndrome, TMJ, heart arrhythmia, and heart attacks
  3. ork performance/relationships with coworkers: work impairment (i.e., decreases in initiative, creativity, risktaking, commitment, concentration, effort, work time, ability to do job); distrust; tardiness; absenteeism; voluntary attrition; stress/strain; job mistakes; sabotage; social withdrawal; isolation from colleagues; deterioration of relationships; impaired individual and group decision-making; thoughts of quitting; change of career goals; withdrawal from extra-role and social involvements; and deterioration of quality of relationships with clients
  4. family/personal life include increases in family conflict and deterioration of relationships among family members, and loss of friendships (Australian Council of Trade Unions, 2000b; Bassman, 1992; Bjorkqvist, et. al, 1994; Blase & Blase, 2002, 2003a, 2003b; Brodsky, 1976; Einarsen, Raknes, & Matthiesen, 1994; External Advisory Committee on the Defence Forces, 2002; Glomb, 2002; Harlos & Pinder, 2000; Hoel, Cooper, & Faragher, 2001; Hornstein, 1996; Hornstein et al., 1995; Irish Taskforce on the Prevention of Workplace Bullying, 2001; Keashly, 2001; Keashly & Jagatic, 2000; Leymann, 1990; Leymann & Gustafsson, 1996; NNLI, 1993; O’Moore, Seigne, McGuire, & Smith, 1998; Pearson, Andersson, & Porath, 2000; Price-Spratlen, 1995; Queensland Government Workplace Bullying Taskforce, 2002; Ryan & Oestrich, 1998, 1991; Tepper, 2000; UNISON, 1997; WBTI, 2003; Westhues, 1998, 2004)

Intensity of Harm


Coping


The Initial Study of Principal Mistreatment

  1. Blase & Blase (2002, 2003a, 2003b) published the first and only study of school principal mistreatment of teachers in the world.
  2. interviewed 50 exemplary teachers throughout the U.S. who experienced severe patterns of prolonged mistreatment by principals
  3. used grounded theory method to collect, analyze, and conceptualize findings related to principal behaviors teachers described as abusive and their effects on teachers, teaching, and students
  4. constructed a model of principal mistreatment consisting of three levels of aggressive, escalating mistreatment (Level 1-indirect aggression, moderate mistreatment; Level 2-direct aggression, escalating mistreatment; and Level 3-direct aggression, severe mistreatment). principal mistreatment of teachers consisted of, for example, ignoring, being insensitive to personal matters, stonewalling, nitpicking, nonsupport with parents/students, withholding resources and taking credit for teacher achievements, overloading, withholding professional development; and, more seriously, sabotaging, prohibiting teacher interaction, docking sick leave, spying, destroying teacher aids, stealing, public and private criticism, favoritism, lying, being explosive and nasty, threats, writing reprimands, giving unwarranted evaluations, mistreating students, forcing one out of a school or teaching job, and sexual and racial harassment
  5. effects of these behaviors included teacher disorientation, humiliation, being ostracized, lowered self-esteem, fear, anger, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), physical damage, damage to professional relationships, damage to performance in the classroom, decreased involvement in the school, and harm to one’s personal and family life. In short, principal mistreatment significantly damaged teachers affectively, cognitively, behaviorally, and physically, and such mistreatment also resulted in considerable adverse effects on classroom teaching
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