How learning conditions and program structure predict burnout and satisfaction in teacher education

Journal articleResearchPeer reviewed

Publication data


ByFriederike Zimmermann, Lena Rösler, Jens Möller, Olaf Köller
Original languageEnglish
Published inEuropean Journal of Teacher Education, 41(3)
Pages318-342
Editor (Publisher)Taylor & Francis
ISSN0261-9768, 1469-5928
DOI/Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1080/02619768.2018.1448778
Publication statusPublished – 2018

To support prospective teachers’ professional development, teacher education should be characterised by conditions that help to prevent burnout and facilitate satisfaction. This study investigates predictors of burnout and satisfaction in teacher education by drawing on universities with different teacher education programme structures and assumed different learning conditions. Programme structure and student characteristics were conceived as antecedents of perceived learning conditions; burnout dimensions and student satisfaction were hypothesised to be consequences of both the distal and more proximal variables. Data were collected at four time points from N = 3,892 students enrolled in teacher education at 13 universities. Structural equation modelling revealed favourable effects of autonomy support, competence support, and social relatedness on the core burnout dimensions and satisfaction. Effects of programme structure on these outcomes were small and mediated by autonomy support and difficulty of demands. Study self-efficacy emerged as a broad personal resource. Implications for teacher education are discussed.