Teacher trainees’ well-being: The role of personal resources
Journal article › Research › Peer reviewed
Publication data
By | Elena Hohensee, Kira Elena Weber |
Original language | English |
Published in | International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(14), Article 8821 |
Pages | 18 |
Editor (Publisher) | MDPI |
ISSN | 1660-4601 |
DOI/Link | https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19148821 |
Publication status | Published – 07.2022 |
Teacher well-being is intrinsically associated with their personal resources, including health literacy and occupational self-regulation. However, there are few empirical findings on teacher trainees' health literacy. Furthermore, occupational self-regulation has so far only been associated with indicators of occupational well-being. From a public health perspective, research on teacher trainees' general well-being will benefit from taking both research aspects into account. In this study, we analysed data from 407 teacher trainees in Germany. Latent profile analysis confirmed the four occupational self-regulatory types (healthy-ambitious, unambitious, excessively ambitious, and resigned), which differed significantly on the health literacy dimensions self-regulation, self-control, self-perception, proactive approach to health, communication and cooperation, and dealing with health information. The health literacy dimensions of self-regulation and self-control were mainly related to occupational self-regulation. Independently of each other, the self-regulatory types and the health literacy dimensions of self-regulation, self-control, and proactive approach to health predicted teacher trainees' general well-being. If both constructs are considered together, the health literacy dimensions explain more variance in teacher trainees' general well-being than the self-regulatory types. Research and practical implications are discussed.