Abstract

The present study compares the burnout levels of vocational instructors working in vocational rehabilitation centers and sheltered workshops in Israel. Sixty-six vocational instructors filled out the Kafry and Pines Burnout Measure, the Kumin Attitudes Measure, and a brief demographic and jobs data questionnaire. The result showed that vocational instructors working in sheltered workshops had higher burnout levels and lower job satisfaction as compared with instructors working in vocational rehabilitation centers. These findings were interpreted based on job framework variables that differed between the systems.

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