Teacher resilience in South Africa : the self-efficacy and teacher efficacy of pre-service teachers preparing to teach in a challenged context
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Volume Title
Publisher
Edith Cowan University
Abstract
This publication addresses a gap in high-quality, quantitative studies on teacher resilience within the less-researched context of the Global South. Specifically, it examines the self-efficacy and teacher efficacy of three cohorts of final-year pre-service teachers in South Africa (N = 1,193). This article aimed to contribute evidence on teacher resilience from an under-researched African context and population. Despite contextual challenges, the pre-service teachers indicated high intrapersonal resilience-enabling pathways, with a statistically significant relationship between their self-efficacy and teacher efficacy. The authors propose an evidence-based framework of how high levels of self-efficacy and teacher efficacy may enable prospective teachers to teach despite chronic and cumulative challenges. Few teacher resilience studies exist in the Global South and South Africa, and this study contributes to the body of literature in this field and hopes to promote place-based (e.g., Global South) research through contextual lenses to provide necessary needed evidence for teacher resilience.
Description
This publication forms part of the Fourth Year Intervention in Research (FIRE) project (Centre for the Study of Resilience [CSR], University of Pretoria [UP]).
The National Research Foundation (NRF) Project of Prof William Fraser (late FIRE project PI), Prof Marien Graham (statistician on the FIRE project) and Prof Ronél Ferreira (current custodian of the FIRE dataset) for permission to access the ethical application and data documentation.
Keywords
Teacher education and resilience, Self-efficacy, Teacher efficacy, Global South, Quantitative, Comparative case study design
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-04: Quality Education
Citation
Jonker, C., Graham, M.A. & Ebersöhn, L. 2025, 'Teacher resilience in South Africa: the self-efficacy and teacher efficacy of pre-service teachers preparing to teach in a challenged context', Australian Journal of Teacher Education, vol. 50, no. 1, pp. 35-57, doi : 10.14221/1835-517X.6373.