2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.tate.2022.103729
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Collaborating in context: Relational trust and collaborative formats at eight elementary schools

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The literature supports that there is a significant relationship between school climate and the degree of collaboration and knowledge sharing that takes place between teachers, both inside and outside of school. Miesner et al (2022) confirmed that school climate (social dynamics and interactions among members of school communities) influences collaborative practices and can support or impede school-based collaboration. Kazak and Polat (2018) concluded that a positive intergenerational atmosphere within a school can prepare the ground for the sharing of knowledge and experience among its teachers.…”
Section: What Does This Paper Cover?mentioning
confidence: 73%
“…The literature supports that there is a significant relationship between school climate and the degree of collaboration and knowledge sharing that takes place between teachers, both inside and outside of school. Miesner et al (2022) confirmed that school climate (social dynamics and interactions among members of school communities) influences collaborative practices and can support or impede school-based collaboration. Kazak and Polat (2018) concluded that a positive intergenerational atmosphere within a school can prepare the ground for the sharing of knowledge and experience among its teachers.…”
Section: What Does This Paper Cover?mentioning
confidence: 73%
“…Greater collegial support among teachers is related to lower levels of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and higher levels of personal accomplishment (Camacho et al, 2021; Schaack et al, 2020). Scholarship from leadership and organizational studies suggests that educators’ perception of school leadership is also a strong predictor of variables proximal to teacher well-being (e.g., job satisfaction, burnout, turnover; Johnson et al, 2012; Olsen & Huang, 2019; Pas et al, 2012), with teachers experiencing greater job satisfaction when school administration involves them in decision making, distributes leadership, establishes trust, and provides beneficial feedback on instruction (Kraft et al, 2016; Miesner et al, 2022; Torres, 2019; Tschannen-Moran & Gareis, 2015). Teacher collaboration can also yield important benefits, including improved teacher performance and professional growth (Ronfeldt et al, 2015), job satisfaction (Olsen & Huang, 2019), student achievement (Reeves et al, 2017), development of collective efficacy beliefs (Goddard et al, 2015), and increased retention of early career teachers (Smith & Ingersoll, 2004).…”
Section: Teacher Well-being and Collegial Relationshipsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Collaboration was a critical element of effective professional development, especially when teachers examined their own practice (De Jong et al, 2022). Requisite, optional, and informal formats of collaboration have existed in school settings (Miesner et al, 2019). Requisite collaboration formats have been mandatory for teachers to attend.…”
Section: Collaboration Of Teachersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Informal collaboration has been the collaboration opportunities teachers created themselves, such as at lunch or outside work hours. When there was a culture in a school in which relational trust existed among staff, teachers collaborated even if time was not structured in the workday for the teachers to do this (Miesner et al, 2019).…”
Section: Collaboration Of Teachersmentioning
confidence: 99%
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