卓越實證概述 Best Evidence in Brief

Does personality matter for effective teaching and burnout?

Lisa Kim and colleagues recently conducted a meta-analysis to try to identify whether personality characteristics are associated with effective teaching.

The study, which was published in Educational Psychology Review, looked at 25 studies (total number of participants = 6,294) that reported on relationships between five teacher personality traits (openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and emotional stability) and two teacher job-related outcomes (teacher effectiveness and burnout).

Overall, the results showed that

  • Teacher personality may be associated with teacher effectiveness and job burnout.
  • For teacher effectiveness, extraversion was found to have the largest effect size (ES= +0.17), and agreeableness the lowest (ES= +0.03).
  • The characteristic most associated with less teacher burnout was emotional stability ( ES=+0.21), and openness had the smallest effect size (ES= +0.04).However, as the effect sizes for burnout were very small, the authors suggest that the results should be approached with caution.

The researchers also looked at whether the source of the teacher personality report (i.e., self-report vs. other-report) and educational level had any moderating effects on the relationship between personality and job-related outcomes. The findings indicated that other-reports of teacher personality were more strongly associated with effectiveness and burnout than self-reports. There were no differences in the strength of the associations between the educational levels.


Source (Open Access): Kim, L. E., Jörg, V., & Klassen, R. M. (2019). A meta-analysis of the effects of teacher personality on teacher effectiveness and burnout. Educational Psychology Review. Advanced online publication. doi: 10.1007/s10648-018-9458-2

Leave a Comment

發表評論

Discover more from 卓越實證概述 Best Evidence in Brief

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading