Abstract

Novice teachers face several challenges during their first years of socialization in schools, often feeling unprepared in managing the full range of teaching duties. If teacher retention and attrition are to be improved, research on the difficulties encountered by novice teachers in diverse contexts and cultures is required. There is a lack of studies regarding physical education (PE) teachers’ induction processes, especially outside Anglophone countries. The aim of this study was, from an occupational socialization perspective, to examine how Swedish novice PE teachers experience, perceive and manage their induction process. Through a single-case study design with embedded multiple units of analysis, we interviewed eight Swedish novice PE teachers. Based on thematic analysis, the results show that Swedish novice PE teachers experience several challenges related to reality shock, marginalization and isolation during induction. We identified three approaches used by the novices as central to successfully managing challenges of induction in the Swedish context: (1) socializing into a community of colleagues, (2) performing the role of the PE teacher as health promoter and (3) maintaining a critical teaching perspective. We conclude that these novice teachers’ socialization relies heavily on the individual, and therefore we argue that the induction process could be further facilitated by formal organizational support. This paper confirms long-standing difficulties reported in other countries, and contributes with new knowledge of how the approaches used when managing challenges of induction are contextually dependent due to the social and political surroundings of education.

Highlights

  • Novice physical education (PE) teachers face several challenges during their first years in the profession

  • We argue for the relevance of an occupational socialization theory (OST) theoretical framework to investigate socialization as context-specific, and examine the challenges of induction met by Swedish novice PE teachers

  • The results contribute to a new qualitative understanding of the lived experiences of novice PE teachers in Sweden and the means by which they manage challenges experienced during induction when socializing into the PE teacher profession

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Summary

Introduction

Novice physical education (PE) teachers face several challenges during their first years in the profession. The induction of novice teachers can be seen as a phase of survival, during which the novices are often expected to manage the complex reality of schools on their own (Flory, 2016; Smith and Ingersoll, 2004). Reality shock has strongly contributed to worsening teacher retention and attrition (Flory, 2016; Richards, 2015; Smith and Ingersoll, 2004). These are long-lasting problems for which there is still no solution. We argue that further research is needed to understand how to support PE teachers in various contexts early in their careers, and is critical to their long-term professional success (Ensign and Woods, 2017; Flory, 2016; Richards et al, 2014)

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