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The SYRI researchers were interested in how teachers perceive work skills and the requirements that influence them. The study showed that the demands often went beyond the professional sphere, leading to conflicts between work and family, which further aggravated the situation of teachers.
"Teachers express concern about their unhealthy lifestyle that is affected by physical, social and organisational work demands as well as the work environment. For example, teachers have complained about the lack of time to rest during the teaching day," said Petr Hlaďo from SYRI and Masaryk University in Brno.
Communication with parents, which is often more challenging for Czech teachers than working with students, also contributes to stress.
"In our study, we have observed that the parents' attitudes toward teachers contribute to interpersonal conflicts that subsequently lead to job stress, threatening feelings of professional inadequacy, and erosion of professional identity," Hlaďo said.
Read more: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41599-024-02811-1
Teachers in Czechia consider communication with the schoolchildren's parents more and more exhausting, and for most of them, it is more demanding than that with students, according to a research by the SYRI National Institute.
Petr Hlaďo deals with research on the working ability of teachers and the education of socially disadvantaged pupils. It investigates which factors influence the capacity of teachers to meet the physical and mental work demands of the teaching profession and how this condition is reflected in burnout syndrome, mental well-being (well-being) and non-work life. SYRI is currently researching how Ukrainian pupils adapt to Czech schools.