Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTITY, SELF-CONCEPT, AND COMMITMENT AMONG TEACHERS IN NORTHWEST FLORIDA by Debra Ann Collins Boutwell Ed.S., The University of West Florida, 2000 M.A., The University of West Florida, 1983 B.M., William Carey College, 1978 A dissertation submitted to the Department of Curriculum Studies and Educational Leadership College of Professional Studies, The University of West Florida In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Education 2003 The dissertation of Debra Ann Collins Boutwell is accepted: _________________________________________ Sherri L. Zimmerman, Committee Member __________________ Date _________________________________________ Alice D. Barlar, Committee Member __________________ Date _________________________________________ Arthur H. Olson, Committee Member __________________ Date _________________________________________ Christine K. Pierce, Committee Member __________________ Date _________________________________________ George M. Barry, Committee Chair __________________ Date Accepted for the Department/Division: _________________________________________ Rex E. Schmid, Chair __________________ Date Accepted for the College: __________________________________________ Janet K. Pilcher, Dean __________________ Date Accepted for the University: __________________________________________ Carl A. Backman, Associate Vice President Academic Affairs ii __________________ Date DEDICATION To the teachers of Okaloosa County School District who taught me as a child and an adult, I wish for you the recognition and respect that you so much deserve, and I thank you for being the professionals that you truly are. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page DEDICATION................................................................................................................ iii LIST OF TABLES......................................................................................................... vii ABSTRACT.................................................................................................................... ix CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION ..............................................................................1 A. Organizational Identity .................................................................2 B. Self-Concept .................................................................................6 C. Organizational Identification ........................................................9 1. Organizational Identification: Commitment to Work...........11 2. Social Identity Theory...........................................................12 3. School Identity in Our Society..............................................12 D. Research Questions.....................................................................15 E. Definition of Terms.....................................................................15 CHAPTER II. REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE ..................................................17 A. Organizational Identity ...............................................................18 B. Definition of Self-Concept..........................................................21 C. Theoretical Models of Self-Concept...........................................23 D. Organizational Identification ......................................................26 1. Social Identity Theory...........................................................28 2. Evolution and Organizational Identity..................................29 CHAPTER III. METHOD .........................................................................................32 A. Purpose of the Study ...................................................................32 B. Research Design..........................................................................34 1. Design ...................................................................................35 2. Participants............................................................................36 3. Human Subjects Protection...................................................38 C. Data Collection Procedures.........................................................39 1. Quantitative Analysis Component ........................................40 a. Research Question 1 .......................................................40 b. Organizational Identity ...................................................40 iv c. Self-Concept ...................................................................42 d. Sociability .......................................................................46 e. Job Competence ..............................................................46 f. Nurturance.......................................................................46 g. Intelligence......................................................................47 h. Sense of Humor...............................................................47 i. Organizational Identification ..........................................49 2. Qualitative Analysis Component ..........................................52 a. Research Question 2 .......................................................52 b. Interview Question 1 and Analysis .................................53 c. Interview Question 2 and Analysis .................................53 d. Interview Question 3 and Analysis .................................53 e. Interview Question 4 and Analysis .................................54 f. Interview Question 5 and Analysis .................................54 g. Interview Question 6 and Analysis .................................54 h. Interview Question 7 and Analysis .................................54 i. Interview Question 8 and Analysis .................................55 3. Data Analysis Procedure.......................................................55 4. Researcher.............................................................................56 CHAPTER IV. PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS OF DATA ............................59 A. Overview of the Study ................................................................59 1. Purpose of the Research........................................................59 2. Research Questions...............................................................60 3. Quantitative Instruments.......................................................60 4. Qualitative Interview Survey ................................................61 B. Description of Participants..........................................................62 C. Procedures for Data Analysis......................................................64 D. Characteristics of Teacher Respondents for Quantitative Instruments..................................................................................65 E. Characteristics of Teacher Respondents From the Qualitative Survey ......................................................................68 F. Measures of Central Tendency for Quantitative Instruments .....68 G. Analysis for Research Question 1...............................................77 1. Independent Variable Model for Predicting Organizational or Teacher Commitment ..............................79 2. Regression Model for Predicting Teacher Commitment ......79 H. Analysis for Research Question 2...............................................81 I. Summary .....................................................................................86 CHAPTER V. CONCLUSIONS, IMPLICATIONS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS..................................................................89 A. Overview and Purpose of This Study .........................................89 B. Conclusions.................................................................................90 1. Research Question 1 .............................................................91 v C. D. E. F. 2. Research Question 2 .............................................................93 Implications From This Study in Reference to the Research Literature .....................................................................96 Recommendations for Future Research ....................................102 1. Population and Sample .......................................................103 2. Method ................................................................................103 3. Inclusion of Other Variables...............................................103 Recommendations for Practitioners..........................................104 Summary ...................................................................................107 REFERENCES .............................................................................................................108 APPENDIXES ..............................................................................................................117 vi LIST OF TABLES Table Page 1. Demographic Information Regarding Participating Schools..............................37 2. Sample of Items From the Global Self-Worth Domain of the Adult Self-Perception Profile........................................................................................45 3. Reliability Coefficients, Means, and Standard Deviations for the Domain of Global Self-Worth on the ASPP.....................................................................48 4. Research Design..................................................................................................57 5. Number of Teachers per School who Completed the Quantitative Instruments and Volunteered for Interview Survey............................................63 6. Demographic Data for Teachers Completing the Quantitative Instruments (n = 140)..............................................................................................................66 7. Years in Teaching for Respondents Completing the Quantitative Instruments..........................................................................................................66 8. Number of Years Teaching at Present School for Teachers Completing the Quantitative Instruments ...............................................................................67 9. Number of Extra Hours Worked per Week for Teachers Completing the Quantitative Instruments.....................................................................................67 10. Mean Score Values for the Quantitative Instruments .........................................69 11. Mean Values for Organizational Identity by OID Item (N = 223) .....................70 12. Mean Values for Self-Concept by ASPP Item (N = 223) ...................................72 vii 13. Mean Values for Commitment by OCQ Item (N = 223) ....................................75 14. Correlation Coefficients of Organizational Commitment (OCQ), School Identity (OID), and Self-Concept (ASPP) ..........................................................78 15. Univariate Tests of Significance for Organizational or Teacher Commitment From School Identity and Self-Concept .......................................79 16. Multiple Correlation Coefficients for the Independent Variables of School Identity (OID) and Self-Concept (ASPP) on the Dependent Variable of Teacher Commitment (OCQ) .............................................................................80 17. Qualitative Interview Survey: Mean Values for Teachers’ Self-Reported Commitment Level, Professional Self-Concept, Extra Hours Worked per Week, and Number of Years Teaching...............................................................82 18. Correlations Between the Variables: School Commitment, Professional, Self-Concept, Extra Hours Worked, and Years in Teaching Included in the Qualitative Interview Survey ..............................................................................83 F1. Compilation of Interview Results .....................................................................139 viii ABSTRACT ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTITY, SELF-CONCEPT, AND COMMITMENT AMONG TEACHERS IN NORTHWEST FLORIDA Debra Ann Collins Boutwell Effects of school identity and teacher self-concept as indicators to commitment were examined. A total of 223 elementary, middle, and high school teachers from 7 northwest Florida schools completed instruments and interviews. Teachers’ school (organizational) identities, measured by the Organizational Identification Scale, were combined with their self-concepts, measured by the Adult Self-Perception Profile, to predict 63% in the variance of commitment at work, measured by the Occupational Commitment Questionnaire. Findings indicated a significant relationship between school identity and teacher commitment (.78), between teacher self-concept and commitment (.21), but not between school identity and teacher self-concept (.13). Teachers valued most highly interactions with students; 66% noted the need to be recognized, praised, and respected as professionals. ix CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Positive outcomes may result from the relationship between the organizational identity of our workplace and our self-image. These outcomes have the power not only to increase economic productivity, but also to accentuate our emotional well-being (Ashforth & Mael, 1992; Mael, 2001). Social identity theory proposes that a person can acquire a more positive social identity through an association with workplaces that have positive identities (Ashforth & Mael; Dutton, Dukerich, & Harquail, 1994; Gatewood, Gowan, & Lautenschlager, 1993). These findings attribute influence on self-affirmation and self-worth from the organizational workplace and the individual’s perception of that organizational identity. Since people’s self-concepts and work behaviors are affected by their perceived organizational identities, social identity theory is an important concept to study and to understand. Identification is a powerful human tendency to tie one’s identity to larger entities. When we identify with a company, a country, or a movement, we believe that the organization’s activities reflect on us, and that our activities reflect on the organization. (Mael, 2001, p. 2) In economically developed nations, 75% to over 90% of those who work do so for an organization. These employees typically spend 40 hours a week in a workplace for 30 to 1 2 50 years (Serksnyte, 1999). The organizational behavior of millions of people is affected by their degree of identification with the workplace. Schools are work organizations in which educators and their employers may experience reciprocal outcomes resulting from the interaction of organizational identity and self-concept. I examined the interaction of educators’ organizational identities and their self-concepts as they relate to commitment at work. The results of this study may reflect the findings from the business world that there is a direct relationship between employees’ organizational identities and their commitment at work or, perhaps, lead to different outcomes. The psychology of social identity theory is powerful because it implies that what members think about their work organizations can change their behavior and perception of self (Dutton et al., 1994). Organizational Identity Findings from business organizations have indicated that an employee’s cognitive connection with the business organization is derived from the images that are in the mind of the employee (Dutton et al., 1994). The first image is known as the perceived organizational identity and is what the employee believes is distinctive, central, and enduring about the organization. The second image is a construed external image that the employee believes outsiders think about the organization. The employee’s perceived attributes of the organization, which arise from perceived organizational identity and construed external image, interacts with the employee’s own self-concept to produce the construct of organizational identification. When an employee’s organizational identity is strong, the individual’s self-concept may have many of the same characteristics as the 3 organization, and organizational identification is strengthened from the positive relationship between organization identity and self-concept. In other words, what defines the organization as a social group also defines the self-concept for employees who strongly identify with their workplace. This positive congruent relationship between organizational identity and self-concept strengthens the organizational identification of the employees. Strong organizational identification leads to behavioral attitudes in employees such as (a) commitment, (b) longevity, and (c) loyalty. When a person’s self-concept and the perceived organizational identity are strong and similar, that person becomes more engaged and committed because the cognitive and emotive connection provides for self-expression and goal-oriented behavior (Shamir, 1991). People may be drawn to organizations that reflect their values and self-concept because they can express themselves and secure an attachment. This exchange enables us to recognize ourselves and be recognized through the cognitive identities between organization and self (Serksnyte, 1999). O’Reilly, Chatman, and Caldwell (1991, 1996) found that people with high organizational identities that complement their perceived self-image had lower turnover rates and reported high intentions to stay committed to their work. This high degree of internalization of the organization is the result of the degree of congruence between organizational identity and self-concept; the greater the congruence, the greater the degree of satisfaction and commitment. People with high levels of organizational identification define themselves and their work organization with the same attributes. Individuals develop a sense of who they are and develop goals and attitudes in relation to what they do at work. 4 There is a reciprocal quality between the identity of a work organization and an employee’s self-concept. The more a positive organizational identity accentuates a member’s self-concept, the stronger his organizational identification (Ashforth & Mael, 1992; Mael, 2001). This is true for employees who associate with an organization that has an attractive organizational image. The affiliation between the organizational identity and employees’ self-concept allows the employees to see themselves with the same positive qualities, thus strengthening self-worth. Mael and Ashforth (1992) found that oneness or belongingness to an organization defines the employee and enhances self-esteem. The greater the distinctiveness of a positive organizational image relative to other organizations, the stronger a member’s organizational identification. The member’s organizational identification strengthens as the organization gains distinctiveness among its organizational competitors. In their study of universities, O’Reilly et al. (1996) found that the degree of perceived organizational identity affects tenure and intensity of commitment to the organization. The longer employees stay, the greater the degree of pride and ownership and increased organizational identity that the members feel. Cooperation and commitment to the organization as a whole rather than concerns of self-preservation are evident when people strongly identify with the organization. People are motivated to maintain a cognitive consistency between their selfconcept and a strong organizational identity. Employees will seek more contact with an organization to increase this consistency if the organizational image is diminished for any reason (Festinger, 1957). Festinger’s theory of cognitive dissonance states that a person’s emotional well-being is affected by the congruence of the organizational identification 5 and self-perceptions. For instance, when a strong organizational identity is confronted with an unfavorable circumstance, the employees will try to resolve the incongruence in order to maintain balance with their self-concept. If the inconsistency or negative attribute cannot be reconciled or altered, the employee with strong organizational identification will experience negative personal outcomes such as depression or stress. Kahn (1990) found that employees will disengage themselves from prior roles of work ethic or exit if the inconsistency is not resolved. Schwartz (1987) found that people who identify strongly with their work organizations will personally experience threats and negative happenstance. Festinger noted, “The important point to remember is that there is pressure to produce consonant relations among cognitions and to avoid or reduce dissonance” (p. 9). Although it is a predecessor, organizational identity is unlike organizational identification (commitment) because organizational identity does not require a history of interaction. In a study conducted with the U.S. Army, Ashforth and Mael (1992) found that new recruits had a higher organizational identity with the Army than that of experienced enlisted soldiers. Therefore, a positive organizational identity did not require a long tenure, career success, or any sustained experiences with the company. The construed external image of an organization can develop an immediate and strongly perceived organizational identity with new members. One’s psychological attachment to an organization can be an extension of interpersonal attachment based on an external construed image and can exist outside interpersonal interaction. Organizational identity based upon perceived and construed image allows people to identify with the organization and their desired or perceived self-concept. 6 Behaviorists studying the business community have emphasized social identity theory with regard to the interworkings of organizational identity and self-concept because this favored principle benefits both the individual and business. LaMastro (2002) wrote that quality organizations are concerned about corporate culture because it helps to sustain the commitment of individual members to the good of the organization. Employees actually internalize the values of their workplace and they define themselves in terms of their membership to that particular organization, thus creating the employees’ organizational identification. Employees reciprocate the organization with favorable attitudes and behaviors such as (a) commitment, (b) job attendance, and (c) increased levels of performance. Self-Concept In the 19th century, William James (1890/1963) defined self-concept as the response to successes and failures in areas that one has deemed important to one’s selfworth. James’ description of self-concept is contingent upon the outcomes from situations that a person has identified as important to his definition of self. A person’s self-concept depends on perceived successes or failures in self-appointed domains. These domains may be in varied areas such as (a) physical attractiveness, (b) competence, (c) athletic ability, (d) affiliation, and (e) approval from others. James proposed that self-concept fluctuates in relation to events and circumstances in the domains of perceived importance. In its widest possible sense, however, a man’s self is the sum total of all that he can call his, not only his body and his psychic powers, but his clothes and his 7 house, his wife and children, his ancestors and friends, his reputation and works, his lands and horses, and yacht and bank account. All these things give him the same emotions. If they prosper he feels triumphant, if they dwindle and die away he feels cast down--not necessarily in the same degree for each thing but in much the same way for all. (James, p. 188) It is the person’s interpretation of the event that affects a sense of personal worth; a subjective evaluation that directly impacts one’s level of self-concept (Crocker & Wolfe, 2001). Erikson (1982) suggested that in late life, individuals develop a mature selfrepresentation or self-concept by confronting and resolving their goals and achievements with their successes and failures. Mature adults move from representations of self that are poorly differentiated in youth to a defined inward orientation (Labouvie-Vief et al., 1994). In childhood and adolescence there is an outward orientation and the assimilation of societal expectations. Later, self-concept becomes more flexible and is integrated with subjective experiences. According to Labouvie-Vief et al., self-representation scores peak at middle age and are lowest in preadolescent and older adult-age groups. There may be a strong correlation between age, career, and organizational identity in that the middle age of life has the highest self-concept scores. Erikson wrote, From here we could once more follow the stages of development and study the way in which in languages the fatherhoods and motherhoods, the sisterhoods and brotherhoods of the “we” come to share a joined identity experienced as most real. But here also it is necessary to amend the very concept of a reality which, as 8 I complained at the beginning, is all too often seen as the “outerworld” to be adjusted to. (p. 88) This also is the stage when people are most likely to have associated with work organizations, to be work-oriented, and to have formed significant organizational identities. A theoretical perspective of self-concept was developed by Shavelson, Hubner, and Stanton (1976) who wrote that a person’s self-perceptions are formed through experiences with and interpretations of his environment. Self-concept is an outcome of perceptions but also a mediating variable that is continually affected by internal and external influences. The study of self-concept has supported multidimensional aspects in that it can be a system of personal nature or shared by a group (Marsh, Craven, & Debus, 1997). In addition to horizontal extensions of self-concept, it also is defined hierarchically with (a) inferences about the self in specific situations at the base; (b) broader extensions to social, physical, and academic levels in the middle; and (c) at the apex, a global self-concept (Byrne, 1996). There is another description of self-concept as a global model that is relatively unidimensional. Rosenberg’s (1979) global scale of self-concept is sometimes referred to as self-esteem but refers to generalized characteristics that describe the person’s overall state. These self-perceptions that add up to a self-concept are based upon responses that take into account measures of importance, saliency, certainty, and ideal standards. Scales for measuring global self-concept base their responses on immediate experience, mood, or the contents of short-term memory rather than requiring cognitive processing of searching for and weighting relevant information from various hierarchical scales for 9 academic, social, and general self-concepts. Byrne (1984) claimed that global selfconcept scales measure a generalized conglomeration of attributes and are more stable than specific components of hierarchical self-concept scales that reflect multiple items. For the purpose of this study, self-concept will be referred to as a global model that is unidimensional and representing an overall personal assessment based on self-perception. Organizational Identification Organizational identification is a powerful cognitive schema that has both positive and negative impacts in rapidly changing environments (Albert & Whetten, 1985; Mael, 2001). A highly positive organizational identification can provide a psychological anchor during times of threat or challenge to an organization. Employees will dedicate themselves to the preservation of the organization’s image in order to maintain cognitive harmony. Any predicament that assaults the image of an organization will be met with motivation and determination to preserve the positive organizational image because selfconcept is so thoroughly tied to the corporate image (Dutton et al., 1994). This loyalty and commitment are the key constituencies that come from organizational identification (Mael). This psychological interaction between organizations and the way people perceive themselves creates a common destiny in which both experience the successes and failures of the organization and its members. Steele (1998) proposed that the greater the attractiveness of the perceived organizational identity, the stronger a person’s organizational identification. The employee’s perception of his organization adds or subtracts from the continuity of selfconcept over time. The organization exerts power over the self-concept of its members 10 that becomes a concern when the organizational identity is weak or suffering. An example of an organization’s mistake affecting its employees is the Exxon Corporation in the aftermath of the Valdez oil spill. Exxon employees reported many instances of withdrawal from societal functions and a sense of personal loss of their self-image and worth because of the public outrage over the incident. These employees formerly had held a high organizational identification based on the positive interactions of organizational identity and self-concept which had since been assaulted by negative circumstances (Fanning, 1990). Organizational leaders are instrumental in articulating and proclaiming what is distinctive, central, and enduring about their organization. Elsbach and Kramer (1998), in their study of members’ responses to organizational identity threats, concluded that the communication that the leader provides is critical; whether it is empirically valid is less important than the fact that it is established. The influential process creates a collective identity for the members and established organizational identity for its members through rituals, symbols, ceremonies, and stories. When the organizational identity is strengthened, members categorize themselves into a social group and increase their commitment because of a strengthened organizational identification. This psychological attachment occurs when members adopt the defining characteristics of the organization-what is distinctive, central, and enduring--as extensions of their own self-concept. Steele (1998) wrote that people often will tolerate inconsistencies between the organization and self-perceptions by affirming other valued dimensions of themselves and ignoring the differences. 11 Organizational Identification: Commitment to Work According to Pratt (1998), organizational identification is a complex perceived construct that is derived from the individual’s beliefs, attitudes, and emotions. Those beliefs, attitudes, and emotions are exhibited behaviorally within the realm of the organization through the level of one’s work commitment. This loyalty to the organization results from a psychological internalization of organizational identity and self-concept. The close reciprocal relationship between self and organization requires increased understanding because of the impacting relationship in an environment of change (Gioia, Schultz, & Corley, 2000). Increasingly, organizations are affected by social, environmental, and economic changes that often are turbulent and far-reaching to employees. The organizational identification of employees as measured by their commitment to work is of profound importance in dealing with reactive and proactive changes in the organization. According to Mowday, Porter, and Steers (1982), organizational commitment is characterized by (a) internalization by the member of the organization’s goals and values, (b) the member’s willingness to exert considerable effort, and (c) the member’s strong desire to maintain membership in the organization. Researchers have attempted to predict the extrinsic elements of commitment at the individual employee level such as turnover rate, work performance, and attendance (Mathieu & Zajac, 1980; Mowday, Steers, & Porter, 1979). The predecessor of commitment is the connection between the individual employee and the organization. Commitment is the behavioral measure of organizational identification. Identification is the human tendency to associate with a larger entity that may be an 12 organization, movement, or group because the identity of the larger entity reflects on the individual and the individual reflects on the larger entity (Dutton et al., 1994). When a sense of self is tied to the organization, loyalty and commitment are the resulting products. When stress, strain, and negative affectivity are reflective from work and self, job satisfaction and commitment are minimized (Decker & Borgen, 1993). Social Identity Theory The psychology of social identity theory implies that human behavior can be changed by amending the organizational image. The organizational image or identity is what the member believes to be central, enduring, and distinctive about the organization. The strength of a member’s organizational identification reflects the degree to which the construct of organizational identity has coalesced with the member’s self-concept. When organizational identity is strong there is a large part of the organization’s characteristics that are synonymous with the member’s personal characteristics. This coalescence, in turn, creates a strong organizational identification in the member and produces a psychological connection between the organization’s successes and failures and the individual member’s value of self-worth (Ashforth & Mael, 1992). School Identity in Our Society Public schools are scrutinized by the media, parents, and legislators--essentially everyone--due to the fact that most of them have been there and have an opinion. The public’s past experiences with their education reinforce the idea that they know what constitutes good and poor school experiences even though, realistically, their experiences 13 are limited to each one’s perspective. The media compare students’ test scores with those of other countries in an attempt to portray the image that schools no longer measure up in academic achievement (Berliner & Biddle, 1995). National leaders propose that student achievement has fallen in America (Bennett, 1992), that American schools fail in comparative studies with other countries (Murphy & Schiller, 1992), and that, while this travesty supposedly exists, America spends more money on education than those nations with higher achievement scores (Berliner & Biddle, 1995). Our legislators mandate more and more accountability measures to ensure that teachers are held responsible and that all students will have learned the same things by the same preappointed day. In January of 2002, President Bush signed the No Child Left Behind Act that requires all states to (a) create standards, (b) test children’s academic achievement based on those standards, and (c) grade school performance in terms of what students achieve on the test of standards (U.S. Department of Education, 2002). In many states, schools are assigned a grade from an A to an F based upon the performance of one grade level on a single criterion-referenced test (U.S. Department of Education, 2002). In an effort to improve schools, state legislatures have passed other laws mandating schools to have parents and other community members serve on school advisory councils to help make decisions about budgets, curriculum, and issues regarding student performance. There is dissension over the public school’s organizational identity, but when it comes to the public evaluation of the nation’s community schools, the story changes. For the first time in the 33 year history of the Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the public’s 14 attitudes toward public schools, a majority of respondents graded their community schools as an A or B (Rose & Gallup, 2001). There appears to be a national trend to score public schools higher as one has more involvement, such as having children attending the schools. There is a tendency for respondents involved with a public school to score it higher than other schools where there is no personal connection. This tendency leads to the questions (a) How do the teachers in those same public schools rate themselves and their schools? and (b) Does their organizational identity and self-concept predict their commitment (also known as organizational identification)? Social identity theory has been studied and applied to corporate areas of America with positive results (Balmer, 1998). Schools, too, are organizations with defining characteristics that include construed external images and organizational identities with distinct, central, and enduring educational cultures. Can findings from the corporate world be applied to educational settings, or are schools different from other work organizations? Does a teacher’s perception of his school (organizational identity) and the teacher’s self-concept relate positively or negatively to his school identification as measured by level of commitment? Can we assume that the greater the correlation between the attributes educators use to define themselves and the attributes they use to define their schools, the stronger the organizational identification and work commitment? With so many pressures on educators from budget cuts, the media, legislators, and the students themselves, do educators have organizational identities and self-concept scores similar to those of the business community? Do the additional external factors not present in many occupations impact educators’ occupational environments? Therefore, the problem of this study was to determine whether a teacher’s organizational identity, as 15 measured by the Organizational Identification Scale (Becker, 1992), interacts with a teacher’s self-concept, as measured by the Adult Self-Perception Profile (Messer & Harter, 1986), to indicate the teacher’s commitment-at-work score as measured by the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (Porter, Steers, Mowday, & Boulian, 1979). Research Questions 1. How does a teacher’s organizational identity, as measured by the Organizational Identification Scale (OID) combine with a teacher’s selfconcept, as measured by the Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP), to indicate a teacher’s commitment at work score, as measured by the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ)? 2. What intrinsic elements of the school organization and the teaching profession (organizational identity) do teachers value in relation to their level of work commitment (organizational identification)? Definition of Terms The following terms are defined as applicable to this study: Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP). A self-report scale created by Messer and Harter (1986) and used in this study to measure teachers’ self-concept. Commitment. Commitment at work is the result of the teacher’s appraisal of the extent to which the work environment fulfills his individual needs. Construed external image. What a teacher or employee believes outsiders think about the school or organization. 16 Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ). An instrument designed to reflect the degree of teacher internalization of organizational identity and self-concept (Porter et al., 1979). Organizational identification. The degree to which a teacher’s self-concept contains the same attributes as the teacher’s organizational identity. Organizational identification reflects (a) work satisfaction, (b) commitment to the organization, and (c) the degree to which a teacher prefers and enjoys working at that particular school (Ashforth & Mael, 1989) Organizational identity. The cognitive connection that the teacher has with the school. The organizational identity is formed from images that the teacher believes are distinctive, central, and enduring to the organization (Albert & Whetten, 1985). Organizational Identity Scale (OID). Scale constructed to measure organizational identity (Becker, 1992). Self-concept. A personal identity that encompasses attributes such as disposition, abilities, and values. A person’s self-concept is formed through experiences and interpretations of one’s environment (James, 1890/1963). CHAPTER II REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE Employee commitment refers to the psychological attachment to the workplace due to the combined cognitive images of organization and self (Allen & Meyer, 1990; O’Reilly et al., 1996). Commitment is known in social identity theory as organizational identification and is a result of the coalesced positive constructs of a member’s organizational identity and self-concept. Identification is the product of a member adopting attitudes and behaviors that are congruent with the organization. Therefore, when an employee has a strong organizational identification, the attributes that an employee uses to define himself or herself also define the organization. The constructs of organization theory and self-concept strengthen an organizational identification and may lead to potential benefits from the social interactions of all employees and their workplaces (Dutton et al., 1994; Mael, 2001). According to Mael (2001), organizational identification has at least five potential benefits. Mael’s findings indicate that organizational identification (a) enhances selfconcept and (b) allows people to transcend themselves which is conducive to mental health when we regard the needs of others instead of our own needs and desires. This self-actualization process lends itself to the third and fourth potential benefits of organizational identification; that of providing (c) meaningful purpose in life, and (d) a 17 18 sense of belonging that blurs the lines between person and entity. The final benefit of organizational identification is that (e) it raises aspirations and provides impetus for one to maximize his potential. Organizational Identity Although the degree of strength varies based upon the subjective evaluation of the organizational member, organizational identity is the image an individual has that represents what an organization means to that person. What is central, distinctive, and enduring about the organization makes up the intrinsic elements of organizational identity (Albert & Whetten, 1985). Employees of organizations find a sense of distinctiveness when the organization provides a defined social identity. Ashforth and Mael (1989, 1992) and Mael (2001) have conducted numerous studies, the findings of which indicated there are benefits of a strong organizational identity--employees focus on tasks that benefit the whole and have stronger commitments and longevity of employment. Employees also benefit from a strong organizational identity on a personal level with increased feelings of self-concept and a sense of personal worth. Members vary in how much they identify with their work organizations and, when they identify strongly, the attributes they use to define the organizations also define them (Gatewood et al., 1993). In addition to the psychological factors, the economic benefits of committed employees are significant to the success of any organization. Festinger’s (1957) theory of cognitive dissonance postulates that people are motivated to maintain consistency between their self-perceptions and their behaviors. When presented with evidence contrary to their viewpoint, or if confronted with having 19 to react in conflict with their values, they experience cognitive dissonance. In music, harmony and dissonance are antonyms; harmony being two or more notes that sound pleasing when played together and dissonance being two or more notes that sound unpleasant when played together. Cognitive dissonance is an unpleasant state of tension due to a pair of cognitions, or two elements of knowledge, that are psychologically uncomfortable to a person. If a person’s organizational identity and self-concept collide or conflict, cognitive dissonance results. Festinger’s theory states that people are motivated to reduce dissonance and will work to resolve the inconsistency. The greater the degree of dissonance, the greater the pressure to reduce the dissonance in order to avoid psychological discomfort. Individuals will try to resolve cognitive dissonance in one of three ways: (a) by maintaining consonant cognitions through substantive change in the organization, (b) by reducing the importance of the dissonant cognitions, or (c) by changing the personal cognitions and focusing on other dimensions of the self and the relationship between themselves and the business (Aronson, 1968). Using the context of an organization, suppose an employee finds out that his company makes a large profit from using lowpaid workers in a foreign country. The individual feels uncomfortable with the situation but is a dedicated employee. This individual can resolve this cognitive dissonance by attempting to change the situation, thus, reinforcing his consonant, preexisting values. The employee also could reduce the importance of dissonant cognitions by rationalizing that the company actually pays a higher salary to the foreign workers than other companies and the practice keeps these workers from starving even though working conditions are not optimal. Or, the employee could maintain the importance of consonant 20 cognitions by accepting this as standard business practice; deciding that the practice is not deplorable and that the ends do justify the means. Organizational identity is a powerful cognitive schema that propels members to resolve inconsistencies and seek solutions to issues that threaten their cognitive schemas of self-concept and organizational image (Dutton & Dukerich, 1991). However, organizational environments are not static; the work environment is a major source of influence on employee behavior. A recent trend of organizations to rely on temporary workers greatly influences the organizational identity of internal workers (Chattopadhay & George, 2001). Some organizational identities have experienced high velocity change while others are more subtle; however, the fact is, that all organizational members must adjust to changing conditions. Strong organizational identities can make change more resistant and difficult to achieve. When members’ organizational identity and self-worth are positive and high, external pressure may be ignored or resisted due to the comfort and emotional security of employees (Bartunek, 1984). This cognitive resistance to change can be accounted for by strong organizational identities that consist of tangible and intangible attributes of the organization. It is easier for organizations to achieve greater success in changing tangible substantive organizational identity attributes than intangible attributes (Reger, Gustafson, DeMarie, & Mullane, 1994). While intuitive leaders seek to increase organizational identity in their organizations, they must understand the change process dynamics. Gioia and Chittipeddi (1991) described current organizational identity as being who they are and an organization’s ideal as who they want to be. The difference between the perceived reality and the ideal goal is called the identity gap and is defined by Reger et al. as the 21 cognitive distance between the perception of current and ideal identities. Small identity gaps usually are met with cognitive apathy while large identity gaps are addressed most likely with opposition. Successful organizational identity change, optimally speaking, should have a moderate identity gap. This dynamic change process is described as a process in which tangible substantive attributes are destroyed while new tangible substantive attributes simultaneously are introduced that contain one or more of the inherent intangible traits of the organization. Definition of Self-Concept Everyone assumes they know what self-concept means, yet a search of literature for a universally accepted definition of the construct yielded 17 different conceptual dimensions on which self-concept definitions could be categorized (Burns, 1979; Byrne, 1984; Hansford & Hattie, 1982; Shavelson et al., 1976; Wells & Marwell, 1976; Zirkel, 1971). In addition to a multitude of mutually exchangeable words for self-concept, such as self-esteem, self-image, and self-worth, many studies were focused on intrinsic elements of self-concept, such as academic, social, and physical attributes (Byrne, 1984, 1990, 1996). When intrinsic elements of self-concept are defined, they can be further evaluated in terms of descriptive or evaluative elements. Agreeing with the statement, “I like my body,” would be a descriptive evaluation of the physical element of a person’s self-concept. “My body is as good as anyone else’s,” is an evaluative judgment based upon the subject’s comparative analysis of the physical element of self-concept (Byrne, 1996, p. 3). 22 Synonymous with self-concept are other ambiguous descriptors of the same human attribute such as (a) self-efficacy, (b) self-esteem, (c) self-worth, (d) self-image, (e) self-perception, (f) self-respect, and (g) self-estimation. Self-concept research was affected detrimentally by at least five factors in the past: (a) lack of a universally accepted definition, (b) assumed congruency between different terms for self-concept, (c) lack of dissemination of meaning between similar concepts, (d) informal versus formal notions of self-concept, and (e) lack of theoretical models. Before 1976, an abundance of research was conducted with regard to self-concept but with little attention paid to theoretical models, scales with content validity, and consistency (Shavelson et al., 1976). Researchers designed measures of self-concept to address issues specific to their studies, thus denying any opportunity for replication. These studies were not based on a theoretical model; they made assumptions about self-concept consisting of unidimensional traits (Byrne, 1996). Since that time, researchers have yielded a literature base rich in methodology with substantive results indicating self-concept as a multidimensional construct. In their review of self-worth literature, Crocker and Wolfe (2001) concluded that self-esteem is the strongest predictor of life satisfaction in the United States, outranking other variables such as income, education, physical health, and marital status. The selfesteem movement of the 1970s assumed that children’s self-esteem could be increased through programs designed to compliment uniqueness and originality in human personality. Crocker and Wolfe’s review of the literature provided little evidence that low self-esteem is the cause of social problems; rather, it is an outcome of a lack of personal 23 success. The research-based literature suggested that an increase in self-worth, selfconcept, and self-esteem is a result of actual accomplishments within social settings. Self-concept is an outcome from psychological and educational situations as well as an impetus facilitating the attainment of other desired outcomes, such as academic performance and social competence (Markus & Wurf, 1987). Self-concept is a hypothetical construct and not directly measurable unless defined. Therefore, construct validity must be established with universally acceptable definitions in order to justify its impact on humans. Self-concept in its broad definition of the psychological construct includes cognitive, affective, and behavioral aspects (Blascovich & Tomaka, 1991; Wells & Marwell, 1976). Self-concept can be differentiated from self-esteem which is more limited and is an evaluative component of self-concept (Byrne, 1996). Theoretical Models of Self-Concept Conceptual frameworks of self-concept often are referred to as theoretical models that are dependent upon the viewpoint of the researcher as to the definitional aspects (Byrne, 1996). Before 1980, very few self-concept measuring instruments were linked to any theory. Self-concept was seen then as a unidimensional construct and the designed instrumental measurements provided a global overall estimation of a level of selfconcept. Marsh (1986, 1998) wrote that most self-concept measures substantiated the multidimensional nature of self-concept. As a result, the two broad perspectives are (a) a unidimensional approach to self-concept as a global overall assessment of human selfworth and (b) a multidimensional approach that depicts self-concept as a conglomerate of academic, social, physical, and general subscales. 24 The unidimensional approach (known as the nomological model) represents the oldest, most traditional description of self-concept (Byrne, 1996). This model derives its results from measuring different areas such as academic, social, physical, and emotional aspects that are given equal weight, and the summation represents an overall self-concept index score. The nomothetic model, thus, makes the assumption that the single score derived from this additive combination of equally weighted aspects of self represents a person’s self-concept. Critics contend that the nomothetic model contradicts the definitional construct of self-concept in that it is a generalization rather than a representative measure of individualized attributes (Harter, 1990). The multidimensional approach to measuring self-concept has several theoretical models to support the incorporation of various influencing factors (Byrne, 1996). Some of these models measure self-concept using domain-specific areas that are interpreted as separate and intercorrelated constructs. One multidimensional approach (the compensatory model) actually has domains with an inverse effect rather than a proportional measure (Marx & Winne, 1980). For instance, this model assumes that a low score on physical self-concept often is associated with a high score on academic selfconcept as typically stereotyped by the smart nerd. Inversely, the compensatory model indicates that a high score on physical self-concept is related to a low score on academic self-concept as typically displayed by the dumb jock. According to Mark and Winne, when the academic and social aspects of self-concept differ, this model compensates the overall self-concept score. This compensatory model maintains that people will compensate a low-score area with another aspect of self in order to maintain a sense of 25 well-being. Their framework allows people to evaluate themselves based upon their perceptions of self in relation to their strengths and weaknesses. The most extensively validated multidimensional model of self-concept is the hierarchical model developed by Shavelson et al. (1976) who proposed that the hierarchically ordered structure model could be tested empirically. The multidimensionality of this model is that the many facets are simultaneously intercorrelated and independent. This hierarchical model is the most empirically tested and validated of all self-concept multidimensional models (Byrne, 1996). Self-concept is hierarchical, with perceptions of personal behavior in specific situations at the base of the hierarchy, moving to inferences about the self in broader domains (e.g., social, physical, and academic) at the middle of the hierarchy, and a global self-concept at the apex (Marsh & Young, 1998, p. 512). The apex of self-concept is a stable measurement, but as one descends the hierarchy, scores become less stable because situation-specific occurrences from the base affect the social, physical, and academic measurements of self in the middle. Situations can change the conceptual inferences of self although many instances that are inconsistent with a person’s global self-concept would be required. The theoretical basis of this multidimensional model is that self-concept is comprised of domain-specific aspects constituted by individualized subscales that can be used as separate constructs or to form a conglomerate score (Byrne, 1996). 26 Organizational Identification As based on Festinger’s (1957) theory of cognitive dissonance, people are motivated to maintain consistency between their self-perceptions and their behaviors which translates in the cognitions of organizational identity and self-concept. When employees strongly identify with their organization, their cognitions are harmonious, and the attributes they use to describe the organization also define them individually as a person (Gatewood et al., 1993). When the self-concept is congruent to the organizational identity due to the alignment of cognitive processes of two constructs, a degree of organizational identification results. Organizational identification is the degree to which an employee’s perception of self (self-concept) reflects the employee’s organizational identity. Organizational scholars have accepted theoretically that membership in a social organization shapes the self-concept of its members (Ashforth & Mael, 1989; Kramer, 1991; Mael, 2001; Tajfel & Turner 1986; Van Maanen & Barley, 1984). These researchers postulate that a person’s self-concept is shaped by his interactions and affiliations with the organization of which the person is a member. The strength of one’s organizational identification is based upon the member’s self-concept having coalesced with what the member believes is distinctive, central, and enduring about the organization. This strength of organizational identification indicates to what degree the employee envisions himself as part of the organization and is, therefore, the impetus of the individual’s commitment to that organization (Chatman, 1991; O’Reilly et al., 1991, 1996). These three studies’ results indicated that the greater the degree of fit between the person and the organization, the greater congruity between the perceived organizational identity and the 27 person’s self-concept. When this value congruency occurred, people reported high intentions to stay with an organization and actually stayed longer than those who did not have as high a value-congruency integration. Identification, according to Mael (2001), is a complex construct that draws on one’s beliefs, attitudes, and emotions; its direct emotional and behavioral ramifications are seen in employee commitment to the organization. An employee’s initial thoughts and beliefs derived from both the organization and self are transformed into attitudinal and behavioral changes in the employee. Institutional and organizational identities shape social relationships, determine attitudinal interactions, and predict employee behavior and commitment (Serksnyte, 1999). Organizational identification is the framework in which social action takes place, the outcomes of which are dependent on the level and degree of interactions between the institution and the employee. Commitment was characterized by Mowday et al. (1982) by three factors: (a) a strong belief in and acceptance of the goals and values of the organization, (b) a willingness to expend efforts for the good of the organization, and (c) a strong desire to continue employment in the organization. The findings of numerous studies testify to the positive power of organizational identification and indicate strong relationships between commitment and (a) work attendance, (b) loyalty, and (c) longevity with the organization (LaMastro, 2002). There is an inverse relationship between commitment and turnover intention, thus, making organizational identification an economically vital element to an organization’s success. According to LaMastro, other studies have produced varying results regarding the relationship between commitment and actual job performance 28 although increased attendance and company longevity are vital elements to the effectiveness of an organization. Organizational research findings consistently support the postulate that employees who have a strong level of perceived organizational support reciprocate with increased attitudes and behaviors that benefit the organization (LaMastro, 2002). Levels of commitment differentiated through evidence in the literature regarding an employee’s organizational and professional commitment. Organizational and professional commitment is not inherently synonymous, and empirical findings indicate they may be distinct entities. LaMastro studied the organizational identification of teachers in relation to a measure of their perceived organization’s support levels and their degree of organizational commitment. The study results indicated that teachers, unlike previous research populations, evidence no distinction between organizational and professional commitment, meaning that their degree of commitment to their school and the education profession was essentially the same. Social Identity Theory Social identity theory relates to the attributes of organizational identity and selfworth to the creation of organizational identification. The greater the consistency between a person’s self-perception and the attributes of a person’s work organization, the stronger that person’s organizational identification (Dutton et al., 1994). Social identity theorists assert that people seek to accentuate their own distinctiveness by attaching to organizations that they perceive as compatible and complimentary to their selfperceptions. People generally want to maintain or improve their self-concept over time 29 and through involvement with different situations. Dutton et al. noted that members assess the attractiveness of an organizational image based upon how well the image “preserves the continuity of their [members’] self-concept, provides distinctiveness, and enhances self-esteem” (p. 246). The more an organization enhances its members’ self-concepts, the stronger the employees’ organizational identification becomes because the members define themselves with the characteristics indicative of the organization. People construct their organizational identities from person-to-person relationships, person-to-company relationships, and person-to-society relationships (Serksnyte, 1999). Social identity construction enables one to relate to one’s environment through an intricately intertwined process that includes one’s immediate environment, organization, and society at large. The benefits to an organization to increase identification are numerous. Employees who identify with the organization (a) expend greater effort, (b) participate in extra-role activities, and (c) serve as supportive promoters of the organization (Ashforth & Mael, 1992; Dutton et al., 1994; Mael, 2001; Pratt, 1998). Retaining an existing employee has been estimated to be five-to-six times less expensive than recruiting and inducting a new employee. Organizations desire the outcomes from organizational identity--loyalty and commitment. Evolution and Organizational Identity Organizations, including schools, have to deal with increasingly complex and turbulent environments in regards to economics, tyranny, and threat. The operational definition of organizational identity that researchers have used for years (what is central, 30 distinctive, and enduring to a member about the character of the organization) is being scrutinized. In recent years, identity has become a topic that is being argued because some hold that organizations are better viewed as relatively fluid due to the change in the economic environment of global trade (Gioia et al., 2000). Gioia et al. noted that such analysis implies that organizational identity is an unstable concept and “this instability in identity is actually adaptive in accomplishing change” (p. 17). When change in an organization is intentionally initiated, leaders often employ a visionary projection of a future image or paradigm shift image to convey their idealistic image to members. Gioia and Thomas (1996) found that such imagined future images often conflict with present and past images and identities of organizational members. This conflict demands a reexamination of the current identity by the members, and the change effort is unlikely to be successful if the existing identity or image cannot be altered in this manner. One tactic recommended for a successful change effort is to cause ambiguity intentionally in order to destabilize the members’ understanding or identity of the organization. In their ambiguity-by-design plan, Gioia and Chittipeddi (1991) wrote that because members desire resolution of the ambiguity, they often will alter their existing interpretations of identity if leaders offer a preferred view that is acceptable to the members’ own self-estimations. Organizational identity actually can resist positive change efforts in that the members want to believe that the organization is what it always has been with distinctive, central, and enduring values. This resistance can be a negative aspect if an organization has a high organizational identity with its members but realistically is not high in actual performance. This strong, unrealistic organizational identity can work to the detriment of 31 the organization if it, indeed, needs to change. Members often attempt to affirm stability in their own perceptions and may even feel threatened if the organization is portrayed in a positive manner that is different than its established identity (Elsbach & Kramer, 1998). Elsbach and Kramer suggested that the viable option to the success of an organization is how instability is managed rather than the preservation of the fixed identity. A balance must be determined to avoid faddish overreactions to temporary external influences yet meet the demands to maintain viability in a changing society. CHAPTER III METHOD Purpose of the Study An organization depends upon the effectiveness of its members. If people define themselves in terms of their organizational memberships, they will tend to internalize the organization’s attributes as their own. People’s view of their organization is known as their organizational identity which defines their self-concept (Ashforth & Mael, 1989). If the association is strong, a member’s internalized values develop into a strong organizational identification. People with a strong organizational identification are more committed and have longer tenure with their organizations (O’Reilly et al., 1991). The stronger the organizational identification, the greater a member’s cooperation with the organization and the more likely the member will take actions that will benefit the organization instead of those that are self-serving (Mowday et al., 1982). The findings of studies of organizational identity and identification provide organizational leaders more than incidental evidence of the importance of developing an organization’s attractiveness and desirability. The distinctiveness of an organization motivates people to maintain consistency between their self-perceptions and the characteristics of the organization. The powerful combination of organizational identity and self-concept creates a strong organizational identification that benefits both the 32 33 organization and the member with a reciprocal quality. People identify strongly with their organization when their perceived self-worth resembles what they feel is central, enduring, and distinctive about the organization. Social identity theory (Festinger, 1957) is based on research in the business community regarding the understanding of perceived organizational images and self-images. The successful implementation of this social theory has created business dynasties when the intrinsic elements between people and organizations are synchronous. In this study I attempted to determine whether a combination of teachers’ school (organization) identities and self-concepts indicated their school (organization) identifications, which was defined in this study as commitment (Mowday et al., 1982). Similar to business organizations, schools have many supporters and critics who also are customers, who hold strong and often negative opinions. Schools as organizations and teachers as members receive many negative opinions from administrators, parents, communities, and even their students, who make demands on the teaching profession. This notion that we are a nation at risk regarding our educational system has permeated our society for the past 20 years. Under the direction of U.S. Secretary of Education Terrel Bell, a document entitled A Nation at Risk concerning the state of education in America was released in 1983 (Berliner & Biddle, 1995). Berliner and Biddle wrote, “A Nation at Risk charged that American students never excelled in international comparisons of student achievement, and that this failure reflected systematic weaknesses in our school programs and lack of talent and motivation among our educators” (p. 3). As Berliner and Biddle 34 also noted, teachers, in a sea of controversy, low pay, and difficult working conditions, teach from undefined motivational sources. Working from undefined motivational sources is different from that of the business community where employees are more likely to choose jobs based on income, benefits, and locations. Therefore, do teachers’ self-concepts depend on their school’s identity, or are teachers more self-actualized due to the nature and purpose of their profession? Perhaps teachers’ self-concepts are not related to their organizational identity, although they still have a strong organizational identification (commitment at work) making theirs an occupation dissimilar to those of the business community. Or, as in the business world, are teachers’ consistency between attributes they would assign to their schools and attributes they would use to define themselves interrelated, and thus strengthen their school identification (commitment at work)? Research Design This quasi-experimental, correlational, descriptive study was designed to assess the impact of teachers’ organizational identities and self-concepts on their commitment at work (organizational identification). In this chapter descriptions are included of (a) the design, (b) the participants, (c) the quantitative and qualitative processes and compilations, (d) the data collection procedures, (e) the instruments, (f) the human rights protection for participants, and (g) the researcher. 35 Design The design of the study included data obtained from three established and research-based instruments: (a) the Organizational Identification Scale (OID) by Becker (1992), (b) the Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP) by Messer and Harter (1986), and (c) the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ) by Mowday et al. (1979). These three instruments were consolidated as one assessment instrument (Appendix A). Each of the research-based instruments was presented individually within the comprehensive assessment instrument with its own heading and set of instructions. Researcher-designed items were added within construct parameters to all three of these quantitative instruments. Limited demographic information is also included pertaining to (a) number of years respondent has taught, (b) number of years at the current school, and (c) number of hours per week spent working after regular hours. A qualitative interview survey completed the data collection sources. A copy of the interview protocol is included in Appendix B. The variables selected for this study were 1. Organizational identity. 2. Self-concept. 3. Organizational identification (commitment level). 4. Years spent teaching. 5. Extra hours spent working. Data collected from the three instruments were triangulated with the demographic information and the feedback obtained from the qualitative interviews (Appendix C). The combined relationship between the multiple regression coefficients of organizational 36 identity and self-worth were analyzed on the dependent variable of commitment. This multivariate analysis determined the strength of the relative contributions of organizational identity and self-worth to commitment. A measure of correlation between the independent variables of organizational identity and self-worth also was analyzed. A univariate analysis was analyzed from the individual regression coefficients of years spent teaching and extra hours spent working on the dependent variable of commitment. This analysis was conducted in an effort to find which variable has the greatest contribution to explaining teacher commitment (Kerlinger & Lee, 2000) Participants The participants in this study were elementary, middle, and high school teachers employed by the Okaloosa County School District, located in the northwest section of Florida. All of the participants were teachers certified by the State of Florida Department of Education who were employed full-time with the Okaloosa County School District. The participating schools were selected by a stratified random sample that included a replacement sampling method. Demographic information about each school is contained in Table 1 (Florida Department of Education, 2002). After securing permission from the Okaloosa County School District Office, the principals of the schools were contacted to obtain their permission for the researcher to attend a faculty meeting and administer the quantitative instruments for organizational identity, self-concept, and organizational identification. The consent form contained a question regarding the participant’s desire to take part in the qualitative interview Table 1 Demographic Information Regarding Participating Schools Percentage of teachers with advanced degrees Average years in teaching profession Number of students 2000-2001 2001-2002 2002-2003 Percentage of free and reduced lunch 1,615 A B B N/A 106 68.2 26.4 13.3 621 B B A 53.0 40 62.1 20.5 120.0 2,082 C A A N/A 112 81.9 43.0 16.5 Kenwood Elem. 619 B A A 23.6 36 65.5 36.1 16.6 Lewis MS 658 A A A 29.5 33 63.5 41.9 12.7 Mary Esther Elem. 516 B A A 29.6 37 60.0 43.7 17.9 School grade School Crestview HS Cherokee Elem. Fort Walton Beach HS Teaching staff Number of Percentage instructional teachers Note. HS = high school; MS = middle school; Elem. = elementary school; N/A = not available. 38 survey. Subjects who answered in the affirmative were contacted by the researcher and interviewed in a private setting that was agreeable to both the participant and the researcher. Human Subjects Protection Permission to conduct this study was obtained from The University of West Florida (UWF) Institutional Review Board for Human Subjects and the Okaloosa County School District (Appendix D). Before the quantitative instruments were administered, the researcher presented an oral explanation of the study and each participant received an introductory letter explaining the study which included an informed consent form that described the benefits and risks per human subject’s protocol. A copy of the letter, as well as a verbatim transcript of the researcher’s oral explanation, was included in the application to the UWF Institutional Review Board for Human Subjects. Participants were assured anonymity and guaranteed that their responses were reported as an aggregate score only. Because there was no place provided for respondents to write their names on the quantitative instruments, they were asked to return their completed assessments and informed consent forms in separate collection baskets provided to assure confidentiality. If requested by any of the teachers, arrangements were made for the return of their assessments and consent forms to the researcher through the district’s courier service. Each teacher’s assessment was coded only to determine the level of the school (elementary, middle, or high). Completion of the quantitative instruments was an indication of permission to use and publish the results. 39 Data Collection Procedures The researcher administered the quantitative instruments at each school’s faculty meeting during the first semester of the 2002-2003 school year. The researcher’s introductory remarks regarding this study were phrased to allow participants to gain insight to the general purpose but not to any specifics that might have influenced their responses on the quantitative instruments. Following the introductory remarks, the researcher read the following: Thank you for helping me today with a survey for my dissertation research. The business community has long studied the effects of social identity theory. This theory proposes that an employee’s organizational identity, that is, how the employee perceives his business organization, influences the values that employee has for himself or herself. Schools are organizations that are affected by many external influences that are beyond our control. In my study, I intend to investigate the effects of organizational identity and self-concept on work commitment and whether the results will be similar to those of the business community. In other words, this research project should measure how teachers view their schools and themselves, and how those views affect commitment levels. This assessment has 73 items, and your answers are completely anonymous. I also have distributed to you an Introductory Letter to Participants and an Informed Consent Form. Please keep the letter for your information as it provides contact numbers for me and my supervisor. Please sign and place the Consent Form in the box by the door as you exit, keeping it separate from your 40 completed assessment. This procedure will ensure that there is no connection between you and your responses. Thank you for your time and cooperation. Mean scores were determined for each participant in (a) organizational identity, (b) general self-concept, and (c) commitment at work (organizational identification). The mean scores from each teacher, the number of years they had taught, and the number of hours they worked after regular hours were analyzed to determine whether there were correlations among their levels of identity, self-concept, and commitment. For the quantitative component of the study (N = 223), the dependent variables were (a) the teachers’ organizational identification scores (commitment), (b) their number of years in teaching, and (c) the number of extra hours they worked. The independent variables were (a) the teachers’ organizational identity and (b) their self-concept scores. For the statistical analysis, the accepted significance level of .05 was used. Data from the qualitative interviews of 34 teachers were collected and analyzed. Quantitative Analysis Component Research Question 1. How does a teacher’s organizational identity, as measured by the Organizational Identification Scale (OID), combine with a teacher’s self-concept, as measured by the Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP), to indicate a teacher’s commitment at work score, as measured by the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ)? Organizational identity. A teacher’s organizational identity was measured through the use of the OID developed by Becker (1992). This scale was constructed to measure organizational identity and has been used as the evaluative component in a significant 41 number of organizational business studies (Ashforth & Mael, 1989, 1992; Becker, 1992; Dutton & Dukerich, 1991; Gatewood et al., 1993). In those studies, the word organization was substituted with the name of the relevant business. In the current study, the word school was substituted for the word organization. The responses to the OID items are on a 7-point, Likert-type scale ranging from strongly disagree to strongly agree. The OID items designed to measure organizational identity are: 1. When someone criticizes my school, it feels like a personal insult. 2. When I talk about my school, I usually say we rather than they. 3. My school’s successes are my successes. 4. When someone praises my school, it feels like a personal compliment. 5. I feel a sense of ownership for my school. 6. If the values of this school were different, I would not be as attached to my school. 7. My attachment to this school is based primarily on the similarity of my values and those represented by my school. 8. Since starting this job, my personal values and those of this school have become more similar. 9. The reason I prefer this school to others is because of what it stands for; that is, its values. The OID has demonstrated good psychometric properties and has been used in a wide range of military research (Ashforth & Mael, 1992), college alumni (Mael & Ashforth, 1992), and generalized business employees (Becker, 1992). The OID has a 42 coefficient alpha of .74 in military research, .80 for college alumni, and .81 for employed business students (Ashforth & Mael; Mael & Ashforth). The researcher created 13 additional items to ensure statistical reliability. The items listed below were written using the operational definition of organizational identity to include internal and external organizational images. 1. The community appreciates this school and recognizes its importance. 2. I find that this school is distinctively different than other schools. 3. I am proud of this school’s accomplishments. 4. Others see this school as a great organization. 5. There are many things about this school that are enduring to me. 6. When someone criticizes my school, I become defensive. 7. This school is more than a place where students are educated. 8. I am proud to tell people where I work. 9. When compared to other schools, this school is an example of educational excellence for which I feel a part. 10. When my school has a problem, I feel personal responsibility. 11. Others see this school as an example of educational excellence. 12. The students of this school are proud to attend here. 13. Parents would rather have their children at this school than at any other. Self-Concept. Teachers’ self-concepts were measured by the ASPP developed by Messer and Harter (1986). The ASPP is a 50-item self-report scale that contains 12 subscales; 11 of the subscales relate to domains of everyday life, and the 12th is a measurement of overall, general self-worth. The 11 subscales related to domains of 43 everyday life include (a) sociability, (b) job competence, (c) nurturance, (d) athletic ability, (e) physical appearance, (f) being an adequate provider, (g) morality, (h) household management, (i) intimate relationships, (j) intelligence, and (k) sense of humor. As a measurement of multiple self-concept domains, Messer and Harter (1986) designed the ASPP’s global self-concept scale to be measured directly and independently of the other subscales. “By measuring global self-worth independently of competence and adequacy judgments, we can address the relationship between self-worth and domainspecific self-perceptions” (Byrne, 1996, p. 190). The ASPP framework varies from other self-concept instruments used for research and is based on the formulation of 19th century psychologist, William James (1890/1963). James proposed that self-esteem or concept is a product of the ratio of one’s success to one’s pretensions. In other words, if one is successful in what one deems important, then a high self-concept will result. Conversely, if one is not successful in an area one considers important, a low self-concept will result. Many instruments designed to measure self-concept are unidimensional; many domains are evaluated and added together to produce an overall self-concept score (Byrne, 1996). The designers of these instruments assumed that all domains are equally important. Other self-concept instruments that designers claim to be multidimensional ultimately produce a score for overall self-concept by totaling the subscale scores with no weighting. The ASPP scale allows for individual perceptions of different domains’ importance to be accounted for as an individualized assessment. In the ASPP, Messer and Harter (1986) developed an 44 instrument that is psychometrically sound and reflects the complexity of a multidimensional adult self-concept. For the purposes of the current study, the only ASPP domains included in the survey instrument were (a) global self-worth, (b) sociability, (c) job competence, (d) nurturance, (e) intelligence, and (f) sense of humor. On the ASPP, global self-worth is considered independent of the other domains and not an aggregate score. The global selfworth domain was formulated by Messer and Harter (1986) on the premise that feelings of worth should be tapped directly by asking questions regarding self-worth, not assuming that this score is derivative of feelings regarding self-perceptions in all the other ASPP domains. The ASPP was designed to measure global self-worth with items that encourage the respondent to measure his perceptions of liking the kind of person he is in an overall sense. The overall global self-concept scale on the ASPP consisted of 6 statements; the other domains added a total of 19 statements, making a total of 25 items. The item format was a forced-choice scale with a range of four points. Two statements are offered per item suggesting that half of all people feel one way and the other half feel the other way about the subject of the item. Messer and Harter (1986) created this self-concept instrument in this manner to legitimize both ends of a spectrum. Respondents were asked to indicate how true either statement was for them with a choice of really true for me or sort of true for me. The wording of the statements was counterbalanced for negative and positive aspects so that some items started with statements of high estimation of competence or adequacy. The format of the global self-worth domain of the ASPP is illustrated in Table 2. All statements on the ASPP instrument were presented in the same 45 Table 2 Sample of Items From the Global Self-Worth Domain of the Adult Self-Perception Profile Really true for me Sort of true for me Sort of true for me Some adults like the way they are leading their lives BUT other adults don’t like the way they are leading their lives. Some adults are very happy being the way they are BUT other adults would like to be different. Some adults sometimes questions whether they are a worthwhile person BUT other adults feel that they are a worthwhile person. Some adults are disappointed with themselves BUT other adults are quite pleased with themselves. Some adults are dissatisfied with themselves BUT other adults are satisfied with themselves. Some adults like the kind of person they are BUT other adults would like to be someone else. Really true for me format as appears in Table 2. Following are the statements from the ASPP domains specifically chosen by the researcher for use in this study. 46 Sociability. Statements that measured the domain of sociability in self-concept were 1. Some adults feel that they are enjoyable to be with BUT other adults often question whether they are enjoyable to be with. 2. Some adults feel uncomfortable when they have to meet new people BUT other adults like to meet new people. 3. Some adults feel at ease with other people BUT other adults are quite shy. 4. Some adults are not very sociable BUT other adults are sociable. (Messer & Harter, 1986) Job competence. ASPP statements that measured the domain of job competence in self-concept were 1. Some adults are not satisfied with the way they do their work BUT other adults are satisfied with the way they do their work. 2. Some adults feel they are very good at their work BUT other adults worry about whether they can do their work. 3. Some adults are not very productive in their work BUT other adults are very productive in their work. 4. Some adults are proud of their work BUT other adults are not very proud of what they do. (Messer & Harter, 1986) Nurturance. ASPP statements that measured the domain of nurturance in selfconcept were 47 1. Some adults see caring or nurturing others as a contribution to the future BUT other adults do not gain a sense of contribution to the future through nurturing others. 2. Some adults do not enjoy fostering the growth of others BUT other adults enjoy fostering the growth of others. 3. Some adults are good at nurturing others BUT other adults are not very nurturant. 4. Some adults do not enjoy nurturing others BUT other adults enjoy being nurturant. (Messer & Harter, 1986) Intelligence. The ASPP statement that measured the domain of intelligence in self-concept were 1. When some adults don’t understand something, it makes them feel stupid BUT other adults don’t necessarily feel stupid when they don’t understand. 2. Some adults feel that they are intelligent BUT other adults question whether they are intelligent. 3. Some adults do not feel that they are very intellectually capable BUT other adults feel that they are intellectually capable. 4. Some adults feel like they are just as smart as other adults BUT other adults wonder if they are as smart. (Messer & Harter, 1986) Sense of humor. The ASPP statements that measured the domain of sense of humor in self-concept were 1. Some adults can really laugh at themselves BUT other adults have a hard time laughing at themselves. 48 2. Some adults feel that they are often too serious about their life BUT other adults are able to find humor in their life. (Messer & Harter, 1986) Since the ASPP is the only self-concept measurement instrument that was designed specifically for a working adult population (Byrne, 1996), it was used in this study with teachers as a working, adult population. According to Byrne, this adds to the validation of the measuring instrument because most other measures were developed and tested with adolescent and college-aged populations. Regarding instrument reliability, two normative samples’ internal consistency reliability coefficients for all subscales ranged from .71 to .87. At the time the current study was conducted, no test-retest had been conducted. Messer and Harter (1986) measured the internal consistency reliability for the global self-worth scale with four groups of adults: (a) homemakers, (b) part-time working women, (c) full-time working women, and (d) full-time working men (Table 3). The overall reliability coefficient for adults was .91. Table 3 Reliability Coefficients, Means, and Standard Deviations for the Domain of Global SelfWorth on the ASPP Reliability M SD Homemakers .92 3.27 0.59 Part-time working women .91 3.31 0.57 Full-time working women .88 3.40 0.56 Full-time working men .91 3.31 0.51 Total sample .91 3.32 0.56 Groups Note. From Manual for the Adult Self-Perception Profile, by B. Messer and S. Harter, 1986, Denver, CO: University of Denver. Adapted with permission of S. Harter. 49 Organizational identification. Also in response to Research Question 1, organizational identification as an index of commitment was determined through the administration of the OCQ (Porter et al., 1979). This measurement is designed to reflect the degree of a teacher’s internalization of organizational identity and self-concept and is a dependent variable. The strength of a member’s organizational identification reflects the degree to which the constructs of organizational identity has coalesced with the member’s self-concept and resulted in the behavioral change called commitment (O’Reilly et al., 1991). The OCQ measured commitment as the relative strength of an individual’s identification with and involvement in a particular organization (Mowday et al., 1982). The OCQ has demonstrated high internal consistency, with average alphas of .90. Test and retest with 2,563 employees proved satisfactory stability, r = .72. The OCQ item responses were on a 7-point, Likert-type scale that ranged from strongly disagree to strongly agree. Respondents were instructed to circle the response number that most closely approximated their agreement or disagreement with each statement. The response values were totaled and averaged to attain an overall OCQ index. The response scale was designed to evaluate three factors: (a) a strong belief in and an acceptance of the organization’s goals and values, (b) a willingness to exert considerable effort on behalf the organization, and (c) a strong desire to maintain membership in the organization. Following are the 15 statements from the OCQ (Porter et al., 1979). As previously noted, the word organization is replaced in each statement with the word school. 1. I am willing to put in a great deal of effort beyond that normally expected in order to help this school be successful. 50 2. I talk up this school to my friends as a great place to work. 3. I feel very little loyalty to this school. 4. I would accept almost any type of job assignment in order to keep working for this school. 5. I find that my values and the school’s values are very similar. 6. I am proud to tell others that I am part of this school. 7. I could just as well be working for a different school as long as the type of work was similar. 8. This school really inspires the very best in me in the way of job performance. 9. It would take very little change in my present circumstances to cause me to leave this school. 10. I am extremely glad that I chose this school to work for over others I was considering at the time I joined. 11. There’s not too much to be gained by sticking with this school indefinitely. 12. Often I find it difficult to agree with the school’s policies on important matters relating to its employees. 13. I really care about the fate of this school. 14. For me, this is the best of all possible schools for which to work. 15. Deciding to work for this school was a definite mistake on my part. The researcher created the following 10 additional statements to ensure statistical reliability. The same 7-point, Likert-type response scale was used, and the statements were numbered sequentially with the items adapted from the OCQ. The researcher- 51 created items were written using the operational definition of organizational identification (the concept of internalization of the organizational characteristics into a person’s selfconcept) and behavioral outcomes indicative of commitment. 16. I feel that it is part of a teacher’s responsibility to work beyond the regular work day for the benefit of the school. 17. I feel that teachers should commit to their schools by sponsoring clubs and activities. 18. My desire is to teach my classes and be left out of all other activities. 19. When my school is honored, I know that I am partially responsible for its success. 20. I prefer working at this school over any other. 21. I have a strong commitment to this school. 22. The people in this school are like a family to me. 23. The administration appreciates what I do for this school. 24. Other teachers appreciate what I do for this school. 25. Students appreciate what I do for this school. Data from both the OID Scale and the ASPP Scale were evaluated to determine the potential relationship and significance of their relationship to predict teachers’ organizational identification or commitment level as measured by the OCQ. Descriptive statistics were used to describe the samples based on the scales of the OID, ASPP, and OCQ with frequencies, means, and standard deviations provided in aggregate and disaggregate forms by level of instruction (elementary, middle, and high school). Multiple regression analyses were used to determine the effects of organizational identity 52 and self-concept on commitment at work (organizational identification). Using principles of correlation and regression, an overall effect of the two independent variables (organizational identity and self-concept) on the dependent variable of commitment at work will be expressed by coefficients of multiple correlations. According to Gall, Borg, and Gall (1996), these coefficients of multiple correlations will indicate to what degree organizational identity and self-concept commonly influence commitment at work (organizational identification). Qualitative Analysis Component Research Question 2. What intrinsic elements of the school organization and the teaching profession (organizational identity) do teachers value in relation to their level of work commitment (organizational identification)? A question on the consent form (Appendix E) asked teachers whether they were willing to be interviewed individually. Teachers who indicated their willingness were contacted and a time arranged to conduct the interview in privacy at their school or by telephone. Dutton and Dukerich (1991) defined organizational identity as the employee’s cognitive connection with the business organization that is derived from the images that are in the mind of the employee. These images are what the employee believes is distinctive, central, and enduring about the business. For the purpose of this study, organizational identity is what the teacher believes is distinctive, central, and enduring about his school. There were eight questions in the qualitative interview (Appendix B). The researcher began each interview reading the following script: 53 Thank you for agreeing to this interview for my research. You may discontinue at anytime but be assured that this is an anonymous interview. Your name and school will not be part of the study and will not be used in my analysis or in the dissertation. I am very interested in how teachers perceive their schools and themselves and how those perceptions relate to a teacher’s strong identification with his school. I thank you, again, for your participation. The eight interview questions were read to the participants in a voice modulated not to express emotion. A compilation of interview results is included in Appendix F. The questions and analysis components for each were: Interview question 1 and analysis. If commitment is a strong belief in the goals of this school and a willingness to expend effort, on a scale from 1-10, one being the lowest or least, how committed are you to this school? Respondents who answered from 1-2 formed the first level, 3-5 formed the second, 6-8 formed the third, and 9-10 formed the fourth level. A self-reported school commitment level was established by responses to this question. Interview question 2 and analysis. What do you personally consider to be special about this school that makes you want to work here? Answers to the second question were grouped according to a respondent’s answer to the first interview question. Question 2 responses were listed by Question 1 levels regarding commitment level. When all Question 2 responses had been assigned a level, they were analyzed for similarities and differences. Interview question 3 and analysis. Educators receive a lot of criticism and praise from the public, media, and government. How do you feel about yourself with regard to 54 your profession as a teacher? This question was designed to be a measure of self-reported professional self-concept and was used to provide a basis of understanding for the next question. Interview question 4 and analysis. On a scale of 1-10, one being the lowest or least, how committed are you to the profession of education? Respondents who answered from 1-2 formed the first level, 3-5 formed the second, 6-8 formed the third, and 9-10 formed the fourth level. This question was designed to establish a self-reported professional commitment level. Interview question 5 and analysis. How many extra hours do you put into your job and does the effort benefit you? The number of hours reported were correlated with the levels established with Interview Question 1, self-reported school commitment score, and the levels of Question 4, self-reported professional commitment score. Interview question 6 and analysis. Name the things that you personally consider to be the most distinctive and enduring about teaching. This item was designed to solicit responses reflective of the operational definition of organizational identity with regard to teaching as a profession. The responses were listed according to the respondent’s level established by the first interview question (school commitment level) and the level established by the fourth interview question (professional commitment level). Interview question 7 and analysis. What needs to happen for teachers to become more committed? This researcher-designed interview question was intended to gain information regarding the change aspects of the organization, either school or professional, that respondents perceived as needed to increase commitment levels. 55 Interview question 8 and analysis. How many years have you taught? The number of years taught were correlated with levels established with Interview Question 1, selfreported school commitment score, and the level of Question 4, self-reported professional commitment score. Data Analysis Procedure The researcher determined whether the construct variables of organizational identity and self-concept influenced a teacher’s commitment (organizational identification) and each other. The additional independent variables of teaching tenure and extra hours worked were analyzed to determine whether organizational identification influenced the behavioral indicator of commitment. The data-gathering technique included a three-part, 73-item, Likert-type quantitative instrument (Appendix A) and an 8-item qualitative interview survey (Appendix B). Descriptive statistics were used to describe the sample based on the OID scale and the ASPP with frequencies, means, and standard deviations aggregated and disaggregated by the level of the schools’ instruction (elementary, middle, and high school). Statistical analyses include measures of central tendency, multiple regression analysis, and qualitative analysis. For the quantitative component of this study, the dependent variable was the teacher’s organizational identification score. The independent variables were the teachers’ organizational identity and their self-concept scores. For the statistical analysis, the accepted social studies significance level of .05 was used (Gall et al., 1996). Data from the qualitative questions regarding what the teachers found distinctive, central, and enduring about their school and profession were collected and 56 analyzed. The research design is presented in Table 4, and additional information regarding the quantitative instrument components is contained in Appendix A. Researcher The researcher is a doctoral candidate in Curriculum and Instruction with an emphasis in Diversity Studies at The University of West Florida. She holds a bachelor’s degree in music with double majors in Music Therapy and Music Education. Her internship for registration as a Music Therapist consisted of a 6-month work experience at Mississippi State Mental Hospital and at Ellisville (MS) State School for the Mentally Handicapped. She completed a master’s degree in Psychology at The University of West Florida with an emphasis in Counseling. Following a 2-year full-time placement with a licensed psychologist and successful completion of the Florida state examination, she was licensed as a mental health counselor. She worked 4 years in private practice as a counselor specializing in families and children. The researcher also has 22 years of experience working in the Okaloosa County School District as a music teacher, guidance counselor, intervention specialist, assistant principal, and district-level administrator. Table 4 Research Design Research question Instrument 1. How does a teacher’s organizational identity, as measured by the Organizational Identification Scale, combined with an index of a teacher’s selfconcept, as measured by the Adult Self-Perception Profile, indicate the teacher’s commitment at-work score as measured by the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire? Organizational Identification Scale (OID) for measuring organizational identity Adult SelfPerception Profile (ASPP) domains of sociability, job competence, nurturance, intelligence, sense of humor, and global self-worth Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ) Number of items Method of analysis Literature sources 22 Likert-type response items Measures of central tendency; multiple regression analysis. SPSS version 11 Ashforth & Mael, 1989, 1992; Dutton & Dukerich, 1991; Gatewood et al., 1993; Mael & Ashforth, 2001 Measures of central tendency; multiple regression analysis. SPSS version 11 Byrne, 1996; Marsh, 1998; Messer & Harter, 1986; Shavelson et al., 1976 Measures of central tendency; multiple regression analysis. SPSS version 11 Becker, 1992; Mael, 2001; Mowday et al., 1979 25 ASPP items 22 Likert-type response items (table continues) Research question 2. What intrinsic elements of the school organization and the teaching profession (organizational identity) do teachers value in relation to their level of work commitment (organizational identification)? Instrument Researcherprepared questionnaire based on operational definitions of research concepts Number of items Method of analysis 8 researcherprepared questions Pearson’s correlation and frequency percentages of various themes Literature sources Becker, 1992; LaMastro, 2002; Mael, 2001; Mowday et al., 1982 CHAPTER IV PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS OF DATA Included in this chapter are (a) an overview of the study including the instruments used, (b) a description of the participants, (c) a description of the procedures for data analyses, and (d) the statistical results for the Organizational Identification Scale (OID), the Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP), the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ), and the qualitative interview surveys. The qualitative data were integrated to augment and provide related information to the results of the quantitative research questions of this study. Overview of the Study Purpose of the Research Through the statistical analyses of data gathered using three quantitative instruments, this researcher examined the interaction of educators’ school identities and their self-concepts as they related to commitment at work. Additional data were collected from qualitative interview surveys and reported to identify themes and elements of school identity as reported by the teachers. Organizational identification strength is based upon an employee’s self-concept having incorporated with what the employee believes is distinctive, central, and enduring 59 60 about the organization, that is, organization identity (Ashforth & Mael, 1992; Mael, 2001). The level of organizational identification indicates to what degree the employee envisions himself or herself as part of the organization and, thus, is the impetus to the employee’s commitment to that organization (Chatman, 1991; O’Reilly et al., 1991, 1996). Schools also are work organizations in which educators may experience reciprocal outcomes on commitment resulting from the interaction of organizational identity and self-concept. Research Questions 1. How does a teacher’s organizational identity, as measured by the Organizational Identification Scale (OID) combine with a teacher’s selfconcept, as measured by the Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP), to indicate a teacher’s commitment at work score, as measured by the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ)? 2. What intrinsic elements of the school organization and the teaching profession (organizational identity) do teachers value in relation to their level of work commitment (organizational identification)? Quantitative Instruments Three quantitative instruments were presented in one survey form (Appendix A) and used to collect empirical data. The OID, developed by Becker (1992), assessed the teacher’s school identity. The ASPP, developed by Messer and Harter (1986), measured the teacher’s self-concept in the domains of (a) sociability, (b) job competence, (c) 61 nurturance, (d) intelligence, (e) sense of humor, and (f) global self-worth for an overall unidimensional measure of self-concept. The OCQ, developed by Porter et al. (1979), measured teachers’ strength of commitment to their school. The OID has demonstrated good psychometric properties and has been used in a wide range of studies involving college alumni (Mael & Ashforth, 1992), generalized business employees (Becker, 1992), and military research (Mael & Ashforth). The OID had a coefficient alpha of -.80 in the study of college alumni and -.74 in the military research. The internal consistency reliabilities for the ASPP were measured utilizing four groups of adults: (a) homemakers, .92, (b) part-time working women, .91, (c) full-time working women, .88, and (d) full-time working men, .91. The overall reliability coefficient for adults was .91 (Messer & Harter, 1986). The OCQ has shown evidence of high internal consistency (average alphas of .90), satisfactory stability (e.g., 2-month test/retest correlation, r = .72), and acceptable predictive validities (Porter et al., 1979). Qualitative Interview Survey The teacher interview survey (Appendix B) consisted of 8 questions that included (a) a self-reported commitment level, (b) listing special elements of their school identity, (c) a self-reported professional self-concept level, (d) reporting how they felt about their professional career choice, (e) reporting elements important to the teaching profession, (f) the number of extra hours they worked per week, (g) what needs to happen for teachers to become more committed, and (h) the number of years they had taught. These questions were developed by the researcher using the operational definitions of this study’s 62 research constructs of school identity, self-concept, and commitment as addressed in chapter 1. A compilation of interview results is contained in Appendix F. Description of Participants The researcher collected data for 2 months, November and December of 2002. The data were collected from 7 public schools that were selected by a stratified random sample that included replacement sampling. The schools included 2 high schools, 2 middle schools, and 3 elementary schools within the Okaloosa County School District in northwest Florida. Although the survey (Appendix A) was administered at the end of a faculty meeting in every school, teachers were given the option not to participate. A statistical analysis was completed that considered (a) sample size, (b) level of significance, and (c) effect size. Although the effect size is beyond the researcher’s control, the independent variables of organizational identity and self-concept are likely to have a major effect on the dependent variable of commitment. Gall, Borg, and Gall (1996, 2002) recommended a sample of at least 81 respondents for an analysis of variance with a medium effect size with a .05 level of significance. Gall et al. recommended only 33 respondents for a sample size with a large effect at the .05 level of significance. In this study, the three quantitative instruments were completed by 223 teachers, making the power of the statistical analysis far stronger since 223 is in the range of subjects recommended for a study with a medium effect size to a small effect size. A summary of how many teachers completed quantitative instruments by school and the number of teachers who volunteered to participate in the completion of the qualitative interview survey is contained in Table 5. All teachers who consented to be 63 Table 5 Number of Teachers per School who Completed the Quantitative Instruments and Volunteered for Interview Survey Number of teachers who completed quantitative instruments Number of teachers who volunteered for interview survey High school A 47 26 High school B 56 16 Middle school A 27 13 Middle school B 32 16 Elementary school A 16 3 Elementary school B 32 15 Elementary school C 13 9 Totals 223 98 School interviewed and who provided their home telephone numbers were interviewed by telephone or received a voice message to contact the researcher in order to set up an appointment. In some instances, teachers did not respond to the voice message or could not be contacted and therefore did not participate in the study. Attempts were not made to contact those teachers who provided a work phone number but did not specify a time to call; the researcher did not want to interrupt the educational process. All of the interviews were conducted in November and December 2002 which may have affected the response rate because of teachers being away from home due to the demands of holiday shopping, programs, and social events. 64 Procedures for Data Analysis The correlation between teacher commitment and the combination of the two predictor variables of organizational identity and self-concept was calculated using the data from the three quantitative instruments. Through qualitative interview surveys, elements of the school organization that teachers valued in relation to their levels of commitment were recorded. Descriptive statistics were used to describe the sample with regard to the number of years the respondents had taught and been employed at their present school and the number of extra hours worked per week for each teacher. Measures of central tendency were used to describe the variables of (a) school identity, (b) self-concept, and (c) commitment. Statistical analyses, including multiple regression, were then used to evaluate the relationships between the variables of (a) school identity, (b) self-concept, and (c) commitment as stated in the research question. The qualitative data collected from the interview surveys were structured so that teachers’ responses could be recorded and ranked in relation to their self-reported commitment levels to their schools and their profession. Teachers’ opinions regarding what elements made their school and profession special to them are listed with their self-reported commitment levels to their schools and profession. All quantitative instrument responses were analyzed using SPSS 11.0 for Windows. Missing data were substituted with the mean score for that particular item as calculated from all teachers’ quantitative instrument responses. This strategy was supported by Gall et al. (1996, 2002), since the vast majority of the questions were answered by all respondents. Missing data accounted for 2% or less of all the responses 65 for the three quantitative instruments. The quantitative instruments’ data represented 223 teachers from 7 schools. Of the teachers who completed the three quantitative instruments, 98 (43%) indicated on their consent form their willingness to participate in the individual qualitative interview survey. Of the 97 volunteers, 32 were available for telephone consultation and completed the individual interview survey for the qualitative portion of this study. There were no missing data from the qualitative interview surveys. Characteristics of Teacher Respondents for Quantitative Instruments All of the respondents (100%) were full-time, certified teachers who worked at one of the seven randomly selected schools within the Okaloosa County School District in northwest Florida. Teacher aides, substitute teachers, part-time teachers, and administrators were excluded from this study. Summary descriptive statistics are presented in Table 6. Teachers were asked how many years they had spent in teaching, how many years at their present school, and how many extra hours per week they worked. Of the 223 teachers who completed the quantitative instruments, 83 (37.21%) did not provide the requested demographic information. It was not determined why such a large percentage did not complete the demographic information; perhaps they felt that their anonymity would be compromised or they did not notice the gridded response section. As shown in Table 7, the majority of the teacher respondents had taught a range of .5 to 30+ years (M = 15.07, SD = 9.92). The range for the number of years taught at their present school was .5 to 32 (M = 8.77, SD = 8.08). The mean number of years taught reflected an experienced teaching population (Table 8). As shown in Table 9, the amount of extra hours worked per week by teachers ranged from 1 to 50 (M = 13.07, SD = 8.53). Table 6 Demographic Data for Teachers Completing the Quantitative Instruments (n = 140) Demographic Years spent teaching Years at present school Extra hours worked per week M SD 15.06 9.92 8.77 8.08 13.07 8.53 Table 7 Years in Teaching for Respondents Completing the Quantitative Instruments Years spent teaching Frequency Percentage Cumulative count 5 years or less 29 20.71 29 6-10 years 32 22.86 61 11-15 years 20 14.29 81 16-20 years 16 11.43 97 21-25 years 20 14.29 117 26-30 years 17 12.14 134 6 4.28 140 Over 30 years Table 8 Number of Years Teaching at Present School for Teachers Completing the Quantitative Instruments Years spent at present school Frequency Percentage Cumulative count 5 years or less 65 46.43 65 6-10 years 30 21.43 95 11-15 years 20 14.29 115 16-20 years 8 5.71 123 21-25 years 9 6.43 132 26-30 years 6 4.29 138 Over 30 years 2 1.43 140 Table 9 Number of Extra Hours Worked per Week for Teachers Completing the Quantitative Instruments Frequency Percentage Cumulative count 5 hours or less 31 22.14 31 6-10 hours 36 25.71 67 11-15 hours 34 24.29 101 16-20 hours 23 16.43 124 More than 20 hours 16 11.43 140 Number of extra hours worked per week 68 Characteristics of Teacher Respondents From the Qualitative Survey The qualitative interview survey respondents had taught a range of .5 to 36 years (M = 17.64, SD = 11.73). These respondents worked from 4 to 30 extra hours per week (M = 13.09, SD = 7.8). Measures of Central Tendency for Quantitative Instruments In order that an inference from the sample statistics could be made to a general population of teachers, confidence intervals were calculated for the variables of (a) organizational identity, (b) self-concept, and (c) commitment. The mean for each variable was calculated based upon each total instrument from all 7 schools. Organizational identity was measured using the OID, developed by Ashforth and Mael (1989), which included items created by the researcher. Self-concept was measured by six domains of the ASPP, developed by Messer and Harter (1986), and included the domains of (a) sociability, (b) job competence, (c) nurturance, (d) intelligence, (e) sense of humor, and (f) global self-worth. Commitment was measured by the OCQ, developed by Porter et al. (1979), which also included researcher-developed items. The mean score values for each survey instrument were computed and are presented in Table 10. Frequency distributions for each item from the three surveys are presented in Tables 11 (OID), 12 (ASPP), and 13 (OCQ). Teachers rated their schools’ identities with a mean of 5.82, which according to Becker (1992) is a strong indicator of high organizational identity. The OID reflects low organizational identity with a score of 1 to 3, medium organizational identity with a score of 4, and high organizational identity with a score of 5 to 7. The OID item that teachers 69 Table 10 Mean Score Values for the Quantitative Instruments M SD OID 5.82 0.78 ASPP 3.31 0.43 OCQ 5.27 0.80 Instrument Note. Organizational identity (OID): A score of 1 to 3 indicates low identification, 5 to 7 indicates high identification. Self-concept (ASPP): A score of 1 to 2 indicates low selfconcept, 3 to 4 indicates high self-concept. Commitment (OCQ): A score of 1 to 3 indicates low organization commitment, 5 to 7 indicates high commitment. from all 7 schools rated highest was Item 2: “When I talk about my school, I usually say ‘we’ rather than ‘they’.” The mean for this item was 6.47 which indicated very strong agreement with this statement. The lowest rated OID item was Item 8, “Since starting this job, my personal values and those of this school have become more similar.” The mean for this item was 4.93, indicating neutral or medium agreement but not a low indicator of organizational identification. Mean values by OID item are presented in Table 11. Teachers rated their self-concepts with a mean of 3.31 which, based on the ASPP, is a strong indicator of self-concept (Messer & Harter, 1986). The ASPP item on which teachers from all 7 schools rated themselves the highest was Item 14. The teachers indicated that “Some adults are proud of their work” was really true for them. The item’s mean of 3.68 indicated a strong level of self-concept. The lowest ratings for an ASPP item was Item 13, “Some adults are not very sociable but other adults are sociable.” Even though it was the lowest scored item (mean of 3.03), the score indicated a strong level of 70 self-concept at the “sort of true for me” level. Mean values by ASPP items are presented in Table 12. Table 11 Mean Values for Organizational Identity by OID Item (N = 223) Item M SD 1. When someone criticizes my school, it feels like a personal insult. 6.44 0.89 2. When I talk about my school, I usually say “we” rather than “they.” 6.47 0.98 3. My school’s successes are my successes. 6.17 1.12 4. When someone praises my school it feels like a personal compliment. 6.28 1.08 5. I feel a sense of ownership for my school. 6.09 1.12 6. If the values of this school were different, I would not be as attached to my school. 5.61 1.46 7. My attachment to this school is primarily based on the similarity of my values and those represented by my school. 5.53 1.34 8. Since starting this job, my personal values and those of this school have become more similar. 4.93 1.57 9. The reason I prefer this school to others is because of what it stands for, that is, its values. 5.43 1.49 10. The community appreciates this school and recognizes its importance. 5.76 1.26 11. I find this school is distinctively different than other schools. 5.50 1.28 12. 6.45 0.83 I am proud of this school’s accomplishments. (table continues) Item M SD 13. Others see this school as a great organization. 5.63 1.22 14. There are many things about this school that are enduring to me. 5.63 1.15 15. When someone criticizes my school, I become defensive. 5.75 1.31 16. This school is more than a place where students are educated. 6.33 0.96 17. I am proud to tell people where I work. 6.36 1.03 18. When compared to other schools, this school is an example of educational excellence for which I feel a part. 5.99 1.08 19. When my school has a problem, I feel personal responsibility. 5.18 1.28 20. Others see this school as an example of educational excellence. 5.51 1.22 21. The students of this school are proud to attend here. 5.57 1.11 22. Parents would rather have their children at this school than any other. 5.30 1.21 Table 12 Mean Values for Self-Concept by ASPP Item (N = 223) ASPP item M SD 1. Some adults are not satisfied with the way they do their work BUT other adults are satisfied with the way they do their work. 3.31 0.87 2. Some adults feel uncomfortable when they have to meet new people BUT other adults like to meet new people. 3.01 0.96 3. Some adults feel that they often are too serious about their lives BUT other adults are able to find humor in their lives. 3.17 0.93 4.a Some adults like the way they are leading their lives BUT other adults don’t like the way they are leading their lives. 3.38 0.78 5.a Some adults feel they are very good at their work BUT other adults worry about whether they can do their work 3.48 0.73 6. Some adults do not enjoy nurturing others BUT other adults enjoy being nurturant. 3.21 0.97 7. When some adults don’t BUT understand something, it makes them feel stupid other adults don’t necessarily feel stupid when they don’t understand. 3.09 0.77 8a Some adults are very happy being the way they are BUT other adults would like to be different. 3.16 0.89 9a Some adults feel at ease with other people BUT other adults are quite shy. 3.08 0.94 (table continues) ASPP item BUT SD 3.38 0.84 10. Some adults sometimes question whether they are a worthwhile person 11. Some adults are not very BUT other adults are very productive in their work productive in their work. 3.40 0.80 12. Some adults feel that they are intelligent 3.33 0.77 13. Some adults are not very BUT other adults are very sociable sociable. 3.03 0.93 14.a Some adults are proud of their work BUT other adults are not very proud of what they do. 3.68 0.51 15. Some adults are disappointed with themselves BUT other adults are quite pleased with themselves. 3.23 0.76 16. Some adults do not feel that they are very intellectually capable BUT other adults feel they are intellectually capable. 3.27 0.83 17.a Some adults can really laugh at themselves BUT other adults have a hard time laughing at themselves. 3.36 0.07 18.a Some adults see caring for nurturing others as a contribution to the future BUT other adults do not gain a sense of contribution through nurturing others. 3.56 0.63 19. Some adults are dissatisfied with themselves BUT other adults are satisfied with themselves. 3.39 0.71 20.a Some adults feel they BUT are just as smart as other adults other adults wonder if they are as smart. 3.31 0.78 BUT other adults feel that they are a worthwhile person. M other adults question whether they are very intelligent. (table continues) 74 ASPP item a M SD 21. Some adults do not enjoy fostering the growth of others BUT other adults enjoy fostering the growth of others. 3.52 0.75 22.a Some adults like the kind of person they are BUT other adults would like to be someone else. 3.43 0.72 23.a Some adults feel they are enjoyable to be with BUT other adults often question whether they are enjoyable to be with. 3.23 0.77 24.a Some adults feel they have a good sense of humor BUT other adults wish their sense of humor was better. 3.36 0.80 25.a Some adults feel they are good at nurturing others BUT other adults are not very nurturing. 3.54 0.70 Indicates the item was inverted for scoring purposes. An overall score of 3 or less on the OCQ reflects a lower commitment to the organization’s goals, a score of 5 reflects higher commitment, and a score of 4 reflects neither high nor low commitment (Mowday et al., 1979; Porter et al., 1979). The teacher respondents rated their overall commitment at a mean of 5.27 which indicated a high level of commitment. The item on the OCQ that teachers from all 7 schools rated the strongest was Item 15, “Deciding to work for this school was a definite mistake on my part.” The mean of 6.36 indicated a strong level of disagreement since the item had been written as a reversed item for balancing purposes. The OCQ item with the lowest score was Item 18, “My desire is to teach my classes and be left out of all of the other 75 activities.” Since this item was written using a negative connotation, the scores were inverted for analysis of the results. This item’s mean of 3.28 indicated a moderately high agreement since the item was written in a reversed form. Mean values by OCQ item are presented in Table 13. Table 13 Mean Values for Commitment by OCQ Item (N = 223) Item I am willing to put in a great deal of effort beyond that normally expected in order to help this school be successful. M 6.28 SD 0.95 2. I talk up this school to my friends as great to work for. 5.96 1.16 3.a I feel very little loyalty to this school. 5.35 2.09 4. I would accept almost any type of job assignment in order to keep working for this school. 3.46 1.93 5. I find that my values and the school’s values are very similar. 5.45 1.39 6. I am proud to tell others that I am part of this school. 6.13 1.04 7.a I could just as well be working for a different school as long as the type of work was similar. 3.95 1.85 8. This school really inspires the very best in me in the way of job performance. 5.39 1.34 9.a It would take very little change in my present circumstances to cause me to leave this school. 4.57 1.94 10. I am extremely glad that I chose this school to work for over others I was considering at the time I joined. 5.71 1.37 1. (table continues) 76 Item There is not too much to be gained by sticking with this school indefinitely. M 5.03 SD 1.82 12.a Often I find it difficult to agree with this school’s policies on important matters relating to its employees 4.53 1.83 13. I really care about the fate of this school. 6.32 1.03 14. For me, this is the best of all possible schools for which to work. 5.62 1.36 15. a Deciding to work for this school was a definite mistake on my part. 6.36 1.26 16. I feel that it is part of a teacher’s responsibility to work beyond the regular work day for the benefit of the school. 4.87 1.77 17. I feel that teachers should commit to the school by sponsoring clubs and activities. 4.56 1.69 18. My desire is to teach my classes and be left out of all of the other activities. 3.28 1.90 19. When my school is honored, I know that I am partially responsible for its success. 5.87 1.13 20. I prefer working at this school over any other. 5.72 1.40 21. I have a strong commitment to this school. 6.09 1.16 22. The people in this school are like a family to me. 5.24 1.50 23. The administration appreciates what I do for this school. 5.38 1.53 24. Other teachers appreciate what I do for this school. 5.19 1.40 25. Students appreciate what I do for this school. 5.37 1.37 a 11. a Indicates the item was inverted for scoring purposes. 77 Analysis for Research Question 1 How does a teacher’s organizational identity, as measured by the Organizational Identification Scale (OID) combine with a teacher’s self-concept, as measured by the Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP), to indicate a teacher’s commitment at work score, as measured by the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ)? Multiple regression analysis was used to determine the correlation between teacher commitment from the combination of the constructs of school identity and teacher self-concept. Using the principles of correlation and regression, multiple regression and other multivariate analyses have become some of the most powerful and appropriate measures for scientific behavioral research (Kerlinger & Lee, 2000). Kerlinger and Lee’s opinion was based on the premise that almost all behavioral research problems are multivariate in nature and cannot be solved with the traditional bivariate approach. Educational research in student achievement has become increasingly analyzed with multiple variants that work together and sometimes against each other. Multiple regression allows the researcher to analyze the common and separate influences of two or more variables on the dependent variable. The overall effect of school identity and teacher self-concept on teacher commitment was calculated by squaring the correlation coefficients. As presented in Table 14, the correlations between teacher commitment (dependent variable) and the independent variables of school identity and self-concept were .78 and .21, respectively. Both correlations to teacher commitment were significant at the .05 level. The correlation between school identity and self-concept was .13, indicating that they were not 78 significantly correlated quantifiable variables. The two independent variables were not found to be related. Table 14 Correlation Coefficients of Organizational Commitment (OCQ), School Identity (OID), and Self-Concept (ASPP) Variables Y (OCQ) Y X1 X2 1.00 Commitment X1 (OID) .78 1.00 .21 .13 School identity X2 (ASPP) 1.00 Self-concept Research literature from the business community supports a strong relational link between organizational identity and self-concept (Ashforth & Mael, 1992; Mael, 2001). The results of this study with teachers did not support this finding which has been established and replicated many times in the business community. Teachers’ school identity scores did not have a significant relationship with their self-concept scores. Findings of this study include identification of a significant relationship between school identity and teacher commitment and a significant relationship between teacher selfconcept and teacher commitment. 79 Independent Variable Model for Predicting Organizational or Teacher Commitment Both independent variables (organization or school identity and self-concept) were significant predictors of organizational or teacher commitment. As shown in Table 15, the most significant of the two was school identity as measured by the OID. The positive coefficients when combined indicted that the higher in favor teacher school identity and teacher self-concept were, the higher the teacher commitment. Table 15 Univariate Tests of Significance for Organizational or Teacher Commitment From School Identity and Self-Concept Regression model df F p OID school identity 1 345.80 .00 ASPP self-concept 1 7.40 .01 Error 220 Teachers’ separate measures of school identity (OID) and self-concept (ASPP) accounted for 63% of the variance in the prediction of teacher commitment (OCQ). This overall effect of the two independent variables (school identity and self-concept) on the dependent variable of commitment at work indicated a fairly strong degree of prediction from these independent variables on the dependent variable. Regression Model for Predicting Teacher Commitment Contained in Table 16 are the results of the analysis of the regression model. These results indicate that the combined quantifiable variables of school identity (OID) 80 and self-concept (ASPP) are, as a whole, significant predictive indicators to the dependent variable of teacher commitment (OCQ). The positive coefficients of school identity and self-concept indicated that the higher teacher attitudes were in both variables, the higher their total commitment. Of the two independent variables, school identity (OID) made the greater contribution in predicting teacher commitment (OCQ). Although statistically significant, self-concept (ASPP) made a lesser contribution to the combined prediction equation for teacher commitment (OCQ). Said another way, teacher commitment (OCQ) is more highly correlated with school identity (OID) than with teacher self-concept (ASPP) as indicated by its higher coefficient and lower p value. Table 16 Multiple Correlation Coefficients for the Independent Variables of School Identity (OID) and Self-Concept (ASPP) on the Dependent Variable of Teacher Commitment (OCQ) Understandardized β Coefficients standard error t p -.12 8.32 -.01 .99 School identity (OID) .89 .05 18.60 .00 Self-concept (ASPP) .21 .08 2.72 .01 Model Constant The researcher found that a teacher’s school (organizational) identity as measured by the OID combined with a teachers’ self-concept as measured by the ASPP did correlate well with a teacher’s commitment at work score as measured by the OCQ. School identity contributed more than self-concept to a teacher’s commitment level although both are correlational factors to commitment. 81 Analysis for Research Question 2 What intrinsic elements of the school organization and the teaching profession (organizational identity) do teachers value in relation to their level of work commitment (organizational identification)? The first research question of this study was designed to determine whether organizational or teacher commitment was influenced by school identity and teacher selfconcept. This association was validated in this study through established quantitative methods. Research Question 2 was designed to discover themes and relationships at the case level to describe the intrinsic elements pertaining to the previously discussed constructs through qualitative methods. In order to establish construct validity of the qualitative survey instrument, the researcher used the operational definitions of the constructs to create the interview questions (Appendix B). No causal relationships will be suggested because a comparative description will be used to describe the teacher-reported elements in a disaggregated manner in relation to the teacher-estimated levels of commitment. The questions were read to each respondent verbatim during each interview for reliability purposes. Teachers who volunteered for the qualitative interview survey wrote their telephone numbers on the original quantitative instrument consent form (Appendix E). The researcher contacted the volunteers for the interview survey (Appendix B), and they were interviewed individually by telephone or in person by appointment. If the teacher was not at home when called, the researcher left a message whenever possible. Teachers were requested to return the researcher’s call when it was convenient for them. A total of 32 teachers were interviewed. The researcher used the same wording for the introduction 82 and the 8 qualitative interview questions. Teacher responses were written verbatim as often as possible. A compilation of the information collected from these qualitative interviews is presented in Appendix F. The researcher originally intended to disaggregate the qualitative interview survey responses based on four levels of self-reported ratings of commitment and professional self-concept that were rated from 1-10. After analyses of the responses, it was found that no teacher reported a score less than 5 on the self-reported commitment scale or the selfreported professional self-concept scale. Since there was no information for the lower two levels, the researcher established means, standard deviations, and Pearson’s correlations for the (a) self-reported commitment level, (b) self-reported professional self-concept, (c) extra hours worked per week, and (d) number of years in teaching (Table 17). Findings that addressed Research Question 2 are reported by frequency and percentages of various themes recorded from teachers. Table 17 Qualitative Interview Survey: Mean Values for Teachers’ Self-Reported Commitment Level, Professional Self-Concept, Extra Hours Worked per Week, and Number of Years Teaching M SD Self-reported commitment level 8.60 1.43 Self-reported professional self-concept 9.21 1.23 Extra hours worked per week 13.09 7.80 Number of years in teaching 17.64 11.73 Variable 83 When the 32 teachers interviewed were asked to use a scale of 1-10 to indicate how committed they were to their school, the mean response was 8.60. The teachers were highly committed to their schools with only 3 of the 32 indicating the lowest recorded scores of a 5 or 6; 19 teachers indicated scores of 9 or 10 on the 10-point scale. The 32 teachers had a mean of 17.64 years in teaching. Correlations between each of the variables of (a) self-reported school commitment level, (b) self-reported professional self-concept, (c) extra hours worked per week, and (d) number of years in teaching were calculated from the qualitative interview responses. These correlations are reported in Table 18. Table 18 Correlations Between the Variables: School Commitment, Professional, Self-Concept, Extra Hours Worked, and Years in Teaching Included in the Qualitative Interview Survey Variable A School commitment B Professional self-concept C Extra hours worked D Years in teaching * p < .05. A B C D 1.00 .27 .36* .14 1.00 .25 -.22 1.00 -.23 1.00 84 The only two variables with a statistically significant correlation were school commitment (A) and extra hours worked (C). Although this was a weak positive relationship, it indicated that the strength of a teacher’s school commitment related to a higher number of extra hours worked per week. This finding indicates that teacher longevity apparently does not relate to a higher professional self-concept or to an increase in the extra hours worked per week. In response to Interview Question 2, teachers listed what they personally considered special about their schools that made them want to work there (Appendix B). This question was designed to provide a description of the intrinsic elements that made their schools special thus creating its image and identity. The question allowed teachers to verbalize what characteristics of their schools contributed to their levels of commitment to those schools. A compilation of the teachers’ responses indicates 1. Thirty-eight percent of the teachers mentioned that their school was special because it did the right things for children or included the mention of students. 2. Thirty-four percent listed the concept of working with peers in terms of collegiality, friendships, or the teamwork with fellow teachers. 3. Twenty-one percent listed their schools’ administration as one of the things they considered special about their schools. For this study, since school identity was the largest contributing factor to increased teacher commitment in the quantitative analysis, it can be said that the school organizational identity elements that were most important to these teachers were (a) the students, (b) working with other teachers, and (c) the administration. 85 After being asked how they felt about themselves with regard to being a teacher (Question 3), and in order to establish a self-reported professional self-concept, teachers were asked to rate on a scale of 1-10 how committed they were to the profession of education (Question 4). The resulting mean of 9.21 was even higher than the selfreported school commitment score of 8.6. Question 4 was intended to establish a measure of professional identity that was not necessarily school-based but rather a numerical measure with regard to the teachers’ satisfaction with a career choice. Teachers were asked how many extra hours they worked every week (Question 5). While the range was from 4 to 30 hours-per-week, the mean was 13.09 hours. Additional findings include the following: 1. Elementary teachers worked a mean of 10.37 extra hours per week (SD = 5.83). 2. Middle school teachers worked a mean of 12.20 extra hours per week (SD = 5.49). 3. High school teachers worked a mean of 14.47 extra hours per week (SD = 8.90). After teachers had reported in Question 4 the level of their professional selfconcept on an ordinal scale, they were asked to name the things that they personally considered to be the most distinctive and enduring about the profession of teaching (Question 6). All of the teachers (100%) included a reference to the learning process of students as being important to their identity with the profession of teaching. They all also mentioned intrinsic reasons such as fulfillment rather than extrinsic reasons for their commitment to the teaching profession. 86 As previously mentioned, the result for professional self-concept produced a high mean of 9.21 on a 10-point scale when teachers were asked about how they felt about themselves as teachers and their commitment to the profession. Teachers also were asked in Question 7, “What needs to happen for teachers to become more committed?” Only 1 of the 32 respondents said that teachers “are so committed now, we could not be more committed.” Of the 32 interviewed, 22% mentioned more accountability, 19% mentioned more support, 25% mentioned increased financial compensation, and 66% mentioned that teachers need to be recognized, praised, and respected as professionals in order to increase their commitment. One veteran teacher with 30 years experience said, Besides money, they [teachers] have to feel and be told that they are valuable. They don’t feel warmth and support of the community. I touch the future--I teach. Most teachers have to say that to themselves to keep going everyday. You don’t do it for the principals or parents. It’s the kid on the second row. . . . I was happy to say my mother was a teacher, but I don’t think my kids are. Findings indicated that in addressing Research Question 2, the intrinsic elements of the school organization that teachers valued were (a) the students, (b) working with other teachers, and (c) the administration. The strongest element that these teachers valued in their career profession of teaching was their interaction with and impact upon students. Summary Teachers’ school identity strength, meaning what the teachers believed was distinctive, central, and enduring about their school, and a measure of the teachers’ self- 87 concept indicated organizational identification. Teachers identified themselves as part of their organization and thus an impetus to their commitment to that school. Teachers from northwest Florida experienced positive, reciprocal outcomes on commitment resulting from the interaction of school identity and self-concept, just as is experienced in the business community (Dutton et al., 1994). Findings of this study indicated that there was a high measure of internalization of the organization as evidenced in commitment from the congruence between organizational identity and self-concept; the greater the congruence, the greater the strength of commitment. People with high levels of organizational identification define themselves and their work organization with the same attributes. Individuals develop a sense of who they are and develop goals and attitudes in relation to what they do at work (O’Reilly et al., 1996). A teacher’s school identity as measured by the OID combined with his selfconcept as measured by the ASPP, indicated that teacher’s commitment-at-work score as measured by the OCQ at a significant level. Based upon the findings of this study, the hypothesis of Research Question 1 is accepted. Results from the qualitative interview survey instrument (Appendix B) indicated that the teachers in this study were strongly committed to their schools and even more strongly committed to the education profession. The intrinsic elements of the school organization that teachers valued were (a) the students, (b) working with other teachers, and (c) the administration. The strongest element that these teachers valued in their career profession of teaching was their interaction with students. For teachers to become more 88 committed, these interview survey respondents emphasized that teachers need to be recognized, praised, and respected as professionals. CHAPTER V CONCLUSIONS, IMPLICATIONS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS Overview and Purpose of This Study This study was conducted in order to gain increased knowledge about the organizational identity, self-concept, and commitment among teachers in a northwest Florida school district. Social identity theory (Dutton et al., 1994) proposes that a person can acquire a more positive social identity through an association with a workplace that has positive identities. Organizational research attributes influence on an employee’s selfworth from the organizational workplace and the individual’s perception of that organizational identity. When a positive internalization occurs within employees from their coalesced organizational identities and self-concepts, desirable outcomes such as commitment, longevity, motivation, attendance, and job satisfaction increase (Becker, 1992; Mowday et al., 1979, 1982). Since employees’ self-concepts and work behaviors are affected by their perceived organizational identities, social identity theory is an important concept to study and understand. Schools also are work organizations in which educators may experience reciprocal outcomes resulting from the interaction of school identity and self-concept contributing to teacher commitment. The interaction of educators’ organizational identities and their self-concepts as they relate to the commitment level at work known as organizational identification were examined in this 89 90 study. Organizational identification is the degree to which a teacher’s self-concept contains the same attributes as the teacher’s organizational identity (Ashforth & Mael, 1989; Kramer, 1991; Mael, 2001; Tajfel & Turner, 1986; Van Maanen & Barley, 1984). The results from this study with teachers partially reflected the research findings from the business world, but also indicated different outcomes specific to this teaching population. The quantitative instruments’ data represented 223 teachers from 7 schools in northwest Florida’s Okaloosa County. All of the respondents were full-time certified teachers. Teacher aides, substitute teachers, part-time teachers, and administrators were excluded from this study. The qualitative interview survey results represented 32 of the 223 teachers who participated in quantitative portion of the study. The researcher contacted the volunteers for the interview survey, and they were interviewed by appointment either by telephone or in person. Conclusions Data were obtained for Research Question 1 from three established quantitative instruments (Appendix A): (a) the Organizational Identification Scale (OID) assessed teachers’ school identity, (b) the Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP) measured their self-concept, and (c) the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ) measured teachers’ strength of commitment to their schools. Analyses of these data evolved from descriptive statistics to describe the sample, measures of central tendency, Pearson’s product-moment correlations, and multiple regression. 91 Data for addressing Research Question 2 were obtained from a researcherdesigned qualitative interview survey (Appendix B). The interview survey consisted of seven questions for teachers that included (a) a self-reported commitment level, (b) a listing of special elements of their school’s identity, (c) a self-reported professional selfconcept level with how they felt about their professional career choice,(d) elements that are important to the profession of teaching, (e) extra hours worked per week, (f) what needs to happen for teachers to become more committed, and (g) their number of years in teaching. Analyses of data included descriptive statistics to describe the sample population, Pearson’s product-moment correlations, and percentage occurrence of themes or topics from the answers within each question. Research Question 1 How does a teacher’s organizational identity, as measured by the Organizational Identification Scale (OID) combine with a teacher’s self-concept, as measured by the Adult Self-Perception Profile (ASPP), to indicate a teacher’s commitment at work score, as measured by the Organizational Commitment Questionnaire (OCQ)? The respondents had taught a range of .5 to 32 years (M = 15.07, SD = 9.92). The range for the number of years taught at their present schools was .5 to 32 years (M = 8.77, SD = 8.77). The mean number of years taught reflected an experienced teaching population. The amount of extra hours worked per week by teachers ranged from 1 to 50 (M = 13.07, SD = 8.53). The overall effect of school identity and teacher self-concept on teacher commitment was calculated. The correlations between teacher commitment (dependent 92 variable) and the independent variables of school identity and self-concept were .78 and .21, respectively. Both correlations of school identity and self-concept to teacher commitment were significant are the .05 level. The correlation between school identity and self-concept, the two independent variables, was .13 indicating that they are not significantly correlated quantifiable variables. For the teachers in this study, the independent variables of school identity and self-concept were not related to each other but were both significantly related to the dependent variable of teacher commitment. Teachers’ separate measures of school identity and self-concept accounted for 63% of the variance in the prediction of teacher commitment. This overall effect of the two independent variables (school identity and self-concept) on the dependent variable of commitment at work indicated a fairly strong degree of prediction from these independent variables on the dependent variable. The elements within organizational identity, or in this case, school identity, are what makes the organization distinctive, central and enduring (Balmer, 1998). The distinctive element refers to what distinguishes the organization from others. What is central to an organization is the essence of it and what that organization represents. The enduring element of organizational identity involves the degree of sameness over time. Teachers’ school identity strength, meaning what the teacher believes is distinctive, central, and enduring about their schools, and a measure of the teachers’ self-concepts indicates organizational identification. Organizational identification is the impetus to commitment and is based upon the degree of strength that teachers envision themselves as part of the school. Based on the findings of this study, northwest Florida teachers, like 93 those in the business community, experienced positive reciprocal outcomes on commitment resulting from the interaction of school identity and self-concept. Research Question 2 What intrinsic elements of the school organization and the teaching profession (organizational identity) do teachers value in relation to their level of work commitment (organizational identification)? The qualitative interview survey respondents had taught a range of .5 to 36 years (M = 17.64, SD = 11.73). These respondents worked from 4 to 30 extra hours per week (M = 13.08, SD = 7.80). This research question was designed to discover, through qualitative methods, themes and relationships at the case level in order to describe the intrinsic elements pertaining to the previously discussed constructs. The intrinsic elements of school identity (what is distinctive, central, and enduring to the teachers) were recorded. Teachers were asked to give self-rated levels of school and professional commitment because of the potential difference in an allegiance to one’s organization and one’s career choice (Moore, Henderson, & Chawla, 1994). The intrinsic elements important to teachers with regard to the profession of teaching were recorded, as well as the extra hours they worked each week, and the number of years they had been teaching. Teachers also were asked what would be required for teachers to become more committed. Correlations among the self-reported levels of school commitment, self-reported levels of professional self-concept, extra hours worked, and years in teaching were calculated from the qualitative interview survey responses. The only two variables with a 94 correlation at the significant level (.05) were school commitment and extra hours worked per week. Although this was a weak positive relationship, it indicated that the strength of a teacher’s school commitment related to a higher number of hours worked per week. There actually was a weak negative correlation among years in teaching and the two variables of professional self-concept and extra hours worked per week. This finding indicated that teacher longevity neither related to a higher professional self-concept nor to an increase in the extra hours worked per week. The 32 teachers who were interviewed had a mean of 17.64 years of teaching experience. When asked how committed they were to their school on a scale of 1-10, a mean of 8.60 was established. The teachers who volunteered to participate in the interview process were highly committed to their schools with only 3 of the 32 teachers indicating the lowest recorded score of 5 or 6 and 19 teachers indicating the highest score of 9 or 10 on the 10-point scale. After establishing what level of commitment teachers had for their schools, they were asked what they personally considered special about their schools that made them want to work there. This interview question was intended to provide a list of the intrinsic elements of organizational identity regarding their schools; the elements that made their schools distinctive, central, and enduring. This question allowed teachers to verbalize what characteristics of their school contributed to their level of commitment to their schools. Analyses of the responses indicated the following: 1. Thirty-eight percent of the teachers mentioned that a school was special because it did the right things for kids or included the mention of students. 95 2. Thirty-four percent listed the concept of working with peers in terms of collegiality, friendships, or teamwork. 3. Twenty-one percent listed their schools’ administration as one of the things they considered special about their schools. In order to establish a self-reported professional self-concept, teachers were asked to rate on a score of 1-10 how committed they were to the profession of education. The mean of 9.21 was even higher than the self-reported school commitment score of 8.60. This interview survey question was designed to establish a measure of professional identity that was not necessarily school-based but was a numerical measure regarding teachers’ satisfaction with their career choice. Teachers in this study had a higher mean indicator of personal commitment (9.21) to the career of teaching than to their schools (8.60). Teachers were asked how many extra hours they worked every week. The range was from 4 to 25 hours; the mean was 13.09 hours. Analysis of the findings indicated the following total extra hours worked per week by school-level for each group of teachers: 1. Elementary teachers worked a mean of 10.37 extra hours (SD = 5.83). 2. Middle school teachers worked a mean of 12.20 extra hours (SD = 5.49). 3. High school teachers worked a mean of 14.47 extra hours (SD = 8.90). Teachers were asked to name the things that they personally considered important about the profession of teaching. Intrinsic factors rather than extrinsic factors were listed by these teachers. All of them (100%) made reference to the learning process of their students as being important. They all felt that they made a difference and enjoyed seeing the “light come on” in children as they learn. No one mentioned extrinsic factors such as 96 having summers off, early dismissal times, fringe benefits, location, promotion opportunities, or extended holiday breaks. Teachers were asked what needs to happen for teachers to become more committed. Only 1 of the 32 teachers said that teachers are “so committed now, we could not be more committed.” The remaining responses included the following: 1. Twenty-two percent mentioned more accountability. 2. Nineteen percent mentioned more support. 3. Twenty-five percent mentioned increased financial compensation. 4. A majority (66%) stated that to increase their commitment, teachers need to be recognized, praised, and respected as professionals. The researcher found that in addressing Research Question 2, the intrinsic elements of the school organization that teachers valued were (a) the students, (b) working with other teachers, and (c) the administration. The strongest element the teachers valued in their career profession of teaching was their interaction with students. According to these highly committed teachers, what it will take for teachers to become more committed is praise, recognition, and respect as a professional. Implications From This Study in Reference to the Research Literature The study of employee commitment in the business community is one of the most researched variables in personnel research (Moore et al., 1994). Most studies have been designed to determine the predictive human responses to commitment; the outcomes of employee behavior. Commitment has been related significantly to an organization’s financial success (Benkhoff, 1997), job satisfaction (Mowday et al., 1982), motivation 97 (Mowday et al., 1979), and attendance (Mathieu & Zajac, 1980). The reason commitment has been so popular as a research subject is its assumed impact on performance. This study was designed to determine whether a teacher’s school identity and self-concept predicted commitment. After this relationship was verified, then the intrinsic elements of school identity and self-concept were examined through qualitative methods to identify their relationship to high levels of teacher commitment. Previous research findings have indicated that when a person’s self-concept and perceived organizational identity are strong and similar, the member becomes more engaged and committed because these elements provide for self-expression and goaloriented behavior (Shamir, 1991). O’Reilly et al. (1996) found that people with high organizational identities that complemented their perceived self-images had lower turnover rates and reported high intentions to stay committed to their work. This researcher did find there was a high degree of internalization of the organization as evidenced in commitment from the congruence between school identity and self-concept. In fact, teachers’ measures of school identity (OID) and self-concept (ASPP) accounted for 63% of the variance in the prediction of teacher commitment (OCQ). This high degree of internalization of the organization was the result of the degree of congruence between organizational identity and self-concept. According to O’Reilly et al. (1996), the greater the congruence the greater the degree of satisfaction and commitment. People with high levels of organizational identification define themselves and their work organization with the same attributes. Individuals develop a sense of who they are and develop goals and attitudes in relation to what they do at work. Unlike the business community and previous research in social identity theory, this was not true for 98 the teachers in this study. The correlation between school identity (OID) and self-concept (ASPP) was .13, indicating that they were not significantly correlated quantifiable variables. The item with the lowest OID score was, “Since starting this job, my personal values and those of this school have become more similar.” The mean of 4.93 indicated a more neutral agreement from teachers that the same attributes that defined the school also defined them. In this study, although the combination of strong school identity and selfconcept indicated stronger commitment levels in teachers, there was not a significant degree of correlation between school identity and self-concept as measured by the quantifiable variables. This finding could be an inherent teacher characteristic of dissimilarity between teachers and school values, meaning that it has always been this way, or that teachers may have felt that the school’s values had changed and theirs had not. According to Dutton and Dukerich (1991), the employees’ perceived attributes of the organization interact with their own self-concept to produce the construct of organizational identification. A strong organizational identification leads to behavioral attributes in employees such as commitment, longevity, and loyalty. In the business community, what defines the organization as a social group also defines the self-concept of employees who identify strongly with their workplace. Teachers’ school identity scores did not have significant relationships with the self-concept scores. For teachers in this study, what defined the school as an organization did not correlate with the teachers’ self-concepts. Roland Barth (1990), a senior lecturer at Harvard and former public school educator, has conducted extensive research in school reform. In his book Improving Schools From Within, Barth wrote, 99 Public educators--superintendents, teachers, principals--have never enjoyed highly revered positions in American society. Yet in difficult times they have been fueled by a sense of their own mission and public recognition of the social usefulness of their work . . . . Schools face not only a crisis in public confidence but, more dangerous, a crisis in selfconfidence. (p.11) Findings of this study indicated a high level of self-concept in teachers with a mean of 3.31 on the 4-point scale of the ASPP. However, self-concept did not significantly correlate with a teachers’ school identity and although a significant indicator of teacher commitment, it was the least contributing factor in the multiple regression analysis on teacher commitment. Identification is an integrated behavioral outcome that draws upon the beliefs, attitudes, and emotions of the employee (Pratt, 1998). These beliefs, attitudes, and emotions are exhibited behaviorally through a level of work commitment. This commitment to the organization results from a psychological internalization of organizational identity and self-concept. This study found significant correlations between school identity and teacher commitment at .78 and between self-concept and teacher commitment at .21. This study used the OCQ develop by Mowday et al. (1979) who wrote that commitment was the relative strength of an individual’s identification with and involvement in a particular organization. The teachers in this study had a strong level of commitment to their schools as evidenced by their (N = 223) mean score of 5.27 on a 7-point, Likert-type scale on the OCQ. 100 Findings from the qualitative interview survey of this study indicated that the 32 teachers interviewed were strongly committed to their schools and even more to the profession of education. In a study of health and law enforcement workers, Moore et al. (1994) found that although correlated, there was a difference between organizational commitment and occupational commitment. Fred Mael (2001; Mael & Ashforth, 1995, 2001), principal research scientist for the American Institute for Research, has studied extensively organizational identification and its impact on various organizations from businesses to college alumni organizations. Mael has concluded that individuals who identify with an organization assume the group characteristics as their own. This process involves internalization of the perceived values of the group. In the qualitative interview survey used in the current study, 32 teachers were asked to name the things that they personally consider to be most distinctive and enduring about the profession of teaching. All of the teachers (100%) included a reference to the learning processes of students as important to their identity with the profession of teaching. Mael and Ashforth concluded that, “Individuals develop a sense of who they are, what their goals and attitudes are, and what they ought to do, from their group memberships” (p. 311). All 32 teachers who participated in the qualitative interviews of this study mentioned intrinsic reasons rather than extrinsic reasons for their commitment to the profession of teaching. In both the 31st and 32nd Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Polls on the public’s attitudes toward the public schools, respondents said that the teaching staff was the most important factor in improving student achievement or selecting a school for their children (Rose & Gallup, 2001; Tayman, 2000). Both polls indicated overwhelmingly from the 101 community responses the importance of good teachers. In this study, although the teachers were very highly committed to their profession and their schools, 66% of them felt that teachers need to be recognized, praised, and respected as professionals in order to increase their commitment. Based on the findings of this study, public opinion regarding the worth of teachers and the teachers’ external identities are somehow not congruent. Qualitative teacher interviewee 7 said in response to a question of what needs to happen for teachers to become more committed, “The need to feel support of administration and the public. Good teachers are quitting early because they are not given enough support.” Interviewee 19 said, “Our society needs to support education and what we are teaching. Give the teachers more control in the classroom. I am a professional. Trust my judgment. Appreciate what I do.” Interviewee 24 said, “We don’t feel that we are taken seriously and held with high esteem in the community. The salary doesn’t reflect a professional image. When you give your all and all you get is criticism . . . I don’t see how many teachers keep going.” The results from the qualitative interview survey indicated that the intrinsic elements of the school organization that the teachers valued were (a) the students, (b) working with other teachers, and (c) the administration. The strongest element that teachers valued in their career profession of teaching was their interaction with students. These are the intrinsic elements of school identity and self-concept that teachers indicated contributed to their commitment. Findings from both the quantitative instruments (Appendix A) and the qualitative interview survey (Appendix B) indicated extremely high levels of commitment from the teachers in this study. The creators of the OCQ (Mowday et al., 1982) defined 102 commitment as the strength of an individual’s identification with an organization which, in turn, is said to be composed of one’s (a) strong belief in and acceptance of the organization’s goals and values, (b) willingness to exert considerable effort on behalf the organization, and (c) a strong desire to maintain membership in the organization. The teachers in this study, despite feelings of being under appreciated, (a) strongly supported their schools’ goals and values, (b) exerted considerable effort as evidenced by the extra hours worked, and (c) willingly exerted considerable effort on behalf the organization. They did their job because of the intrinsic rewards gained from their students’ responses to their instructional practices. Recommendations for Future Research Commitment is one of the most popular research topics in organizational behavior studies (Benkhoff, 1997). Mathieu and Zajac (1980) concluded from their findings that, “Although higher levels of commitment may relate to improved job performance in some situations . . . the present findings suggest that commitment has very little direct influence on performance in most instances” (p. 184). Contrary to those findings, Benkhoff, using the OCQ and sales targets of bank employees, found that commitment was related significantly to performance as indicated by the financial success of bank branches. In Benkhoff’s study, the most significant factor of commitment contributing to performance was the employees’ attitudes toward their supervisors. While this researcher’s study did not measure teacher performance in relation to their commitment levels, the findings do present areas for exploration by other research studies of teachers related to student achievement. Additional suggested areas for future inquiry follow. 103 Population and Sample 1. Studies that utilize samples of teachers from other locations (rural, suburban, and urban) could be analyzed to compare levels of school identity, selfconcept, and commitment. 2. Studies utilizing a population of teachers from school districts that do not have high accountability rankings based on state and national assessments should be conducted to determine the impact on teacher commitment. Method 1. This study examined the selected variables of (a) school identity, (b) selfconcept, and (c) commitment during a particular point in time. A longitudinal study involving measures of commitment during the implementation of the No Child Left Behind Act could yield important results as teachers’ evaluations and pay become connected to their students’ achievement scores. 2. Disaggregation of commitment scores by school within an intense qualitative study design could provide more insight to effective individual school practices rather than a collective summation of important school identity intrinsic elements. Inclusion of Other Variables 1. Other variables that affect teacher commitment that could be studied using a multiple regression model include (a) job stress, (b) level of perceived administrative support, (c) attendance, (d) longevity, and (e) job satisfaction. 104 2. More research should be conducted that contributes to an increased understanding within the educational profession to determine whether teacher commitment is related to their job performance. Measures of teacher effectiveness could be utilized or, more importantly, annual student gains in achievement could be used to determine if teacher commitment predicts increased student achievement. 3. Learning more about the outcomes of teacher commitment would necessitate further study into what contributes to teacher commitment. Variables such as (a) salary, (b) hours, (c) level of input into decisions, (d) staff development, (e) degree of teacher collegiality, (f) size of school, and (g) perceived levels of administrative support should be analyzed. 4. Measuring teacher commitment in relation to the leadership style of the principal could provide insight for instructional leaders. 5. Student measures of perceived teacher commitment and characteristics of high internalization of school identity and self-concept could be useful. Recommendations for Practitioners The findings of this study have implications for both school administrators and teachers. The importance of school identity (what is central, distinctive, and enduring about the school) plays a major role in predicting teacher commitment. According to the operational definition of organizational identity, schools must (a) stand for something, (b) have unique characteristics, and (c) have tradition with an established culture (Dutton et al., 1994). The leader of the school, the principal, must ably perform multiple duties and 105 successfully accomplish tasks from instructional leader to the plant manager. However, the most important duty for the principal is to provide an atmosphere conducive to increasing student achievement by increasing the organizational identification among the teachers. More than new buildings, computer programs, small class ratios, or a myriad of educational programs, teachers are the critical element with the greatest impact on student achievement. The teachers in this study identified the students, collegiality, and their administrators as the most important elements for their school identity. The implication for these teachers to educational leaders is to (a) create a safe, orderly place for students; (b) provide opportunities for teacher collaboration; and (c) be supportive of the teaching staff. Collegiality is more than teacher lounge talk. Collegiality is (a) the practice of sharing what instructional practices are working, (b) analyzing and criticizing procedures, (c) aligning curriculum, and (d) refining the practice of intervention strategies. Providing opportunities for teacher collaboration is imperative in order to define and perfect a viable curriculum. Based on this researcher’s calculations, most high school teachers at the end of a 30-year career will probably have taught over 27,000 classes. Of those 27,000 classes, there probably has been another adult in the room less than 30 times, and that adult most likely was an administrator. There are great potential benefits from opening the closed doors of the classrooms for teachers to observe, interact, and refine the art and science of effective teaching through collegiality. Teachers’ self-concepts do not coalesce with the school identities as in the business community, perhaps because of more extensive external criticism from media, parents, administrators, and legislators. It possibly is self-protection for teachers not to value themselves in relation to the image of their school. However, the teachers in this 106 study were extremely committed and indicated high levels of their schools’ identities. Yet 66% of the teachers mentioned their need for more appreciation, praise, and respect. All (100%) of the interviewed teachers identified the reason they teach is their students’ behavioral responses when they learn--seeing “the light come on.” Teachers commit to their profession for intrinsic reasons; they may never gain the respect that they deserve from the community because many will continue to teach regardless of how they are treated. It has almost become an unhealthy enabling relationship in which teachers are held by the public as important to their children but are not esteemed with the professional respect they deserve. Although most teachers would never consider taking drastic action, they will have to become individual agents; instead of chartered schools, they could become chartered teachers. Teachers could then negotiate their terms based upon their skills in producing student achievement. This type of action may be what it will take to gain professional respect in the work community. But, because the intrinsic elements of teaching are so powerful to teachers, they will continue to be educators for the privilege of truly changing lives. As the shortage of teachers becomes more critical and the need to reach a diversified population of students increases, it is important to examine the indicators of teacher commitment. With national legislation in place that makes schools in all states accountable for their instructional effectiveness, it is imperative to provide the environment for teachers to learn and implement the best prescriptive strategies so that no child is left behind. We must not only retain our teachers, but recruit more dedicated teachers to meet the needs of America’s children. 107 Summary Teachers who participated in this study were highly committed to their schools and to the education profession. The teachers I interviewed wanted to continue the interview long past the 8 questions. These teachers wanted to improve education even though they felt unappreciated. They had an uncanny resiliency to the external sources of pressure and still strongly expressed their commitment to the teaching profession. The northwest Florida teachers who participated in this study did experience, as in the business community, positive reciprocal outcomes on commitment resulting from the interaction of their school identity and self-concept. Teachers’ school identities combined with their self-concepts to predict their commitment. School identity was a stronger contributor to commitment than self-esteem. The organizational (school) identity elements that these teachers valued were working with the students, collegiality, and the administration. The strongest element teachers valued in their career profession of teaching was their interaction with students. For educators to become more committed, interview respondents emphasized that teachers need to be recognized, praised, and respected as professionals. The general consensus regarding the need for respect was best summed up by a teacher who said, “The public needs to value us. First, value education by raising our salaries. Then they will not say we just teach because we can’t do anything else. To be respected as a professional is very important.” REFERENCES Albert, S., & Whetten, D. A. (1985). Organizational identity. Research in Organizational Behavior, 7, 263-295. Allen, N. J., & Meyer, J. P. (1990). The measurement and antecedents of affective, continuance, and normative commitment to the organization. Journal of Occupational Psychology, 63, 1-18. Aronson, E. (1968). Dissonance theory: Progress and problems. Chicago: Rand McNally. Ashforth, B. E., & Mael, F. A. (1989). Social identity theory and the organization. Academy of Management Review, 14, 20-39. Ashforth, B. E., & Mael, F. A. (1992, August). The dark side of organizational identification. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Academy of Management, Las Vegas, NV. Balmer, J. M. T. (1998). Corporate identity: There is much more to it than meets the eye. International Studies of Management and Organization, 28, 12-31. Barth, R. S. (1990). Improving schools from within. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Bartunek, J. M. (1984). Changing interpretive schemes and organizational restructuring: The example of a religious order. Administrative Science Quarterly, 29, 355-372. 108 109 Becker, T. E. (1992). Foci and bases of commitment: Are they distinctions worth making? Academy of Management Journal, 35, 232-244. Benkhoff, B. (1997). Ignoring commitment is costly: New approaches establish the missing link between commitment and performance. Human Relations, 50, 701726. Bennett, W. L. (1992). The devaluing of America: The fight for our culture and our children. New York: Simon & Schuster. Berliner, D. C., & Biddle, B. J. (1995). The manufactured crisis: Myths, fraud, and attack on America’s public schools. Cambridge, MA: Perseus. Blascovich, J., & Tomaka, J. (1991). Measures of self-esteem. In J. Robinson, P. Shaver, & L. Wrightsman (Eds.), Measures of personality and social psychological attitudes (pp. 115-160). San Diego, CA: Academic Press. Burns, R. B. (1979). The self-concept: Theory, measurement, development, and behavior. New York: Longman. Byrne, B. M. (1984). The general/academic self-concept nomological network: A review of construct validation research. Review of Educational Research, 54, 427-456. Byrne, B. M. (1990). Methodological approaches to the validation of academic selfconcept: The construct and its measures. Applied Measurement in Education, 3, 185-207. Byrne, B. M. (1996). Measuring self-concept across the life-span. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association. Chatman, J. A. (1991). Matching people and organizations: Selection and socialization in public accounting firms. Administrative Science Quarterly, 36, 459-484. 110 Chattopadhay, P., & George, E. (2001). Examining the effects of work externalization through the lens of social identity theory. Journal of Applied Psychology, 86, 781788. Crocker, J., & Wolfe, C. T. (2001). Contingencies of self-worth. Psychological Review, 108, 593-623. Decker, P. J., & Borgen, F. H. (1993). Dimensions of work appraisal: Stress, strain, coping, job satisfaction, and negative affectivity. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 40, 470-478. Dutton, J. E., & Dukerich, J. H. (1991). Keeping an eye on the mirror: The role of image and identity in organizational adaptation. Academy of Management Review, 34, 517-554. Dutton, J. E., Dukerich, J. H., & Harquail, C. V. (1994). Organizational images and member identification. Administrative Science Quarterly, 39, 239-263. Elsbach, K. D., & Kramer, R. M. (1998). Members’ responses to organizational threats: Encountering and countering the Business Week rankings. Administrative Science Quarterly, 41, 442-476. Erikson, E. (1982). The life cycle completed. New York: Norton. Fanning, D. (1990, August 19). Coping in industries that the public hates. New York Times, p. F25. Festinger, L. (1957). A theory of cognitive dissonance. New York: Harper and Row. Florida Department of Education. (2002). School indicators report. Tallahassee, FL: Author. 111 Gall, M. D., Borg, W. R., & Gall, J. P. (1996). Educational research (6th ed.). White Plains, NY: Longman. Gall, M. D., Borg W. R., & Gall, J. P. (2002). Educational research (7th ed.). Boston: Pearson. Gatewood, R. D., Gowan, M. A., & Lautenschlager, G. J. (1993). Corporate image, recruitment image, and initial job choices. Academy of Management Journal, 36, 414-427. Gioia, D. A., & Chittipeddi, K. (1991). Sense-making and sense-giving in strategic change initiation. Strategic Management Journal, 12, 443-448. Gioia, D. A., Schultz, M., & Corley, K. G. (2000). Organizational identity, image, and adaptive instability [Electronic version]. Academy of Management Review, 25, 6381. Gioia, D. A., & Thomas, J. B. (1996). Identity, image, and issue interpretation: Sensemaking during strategic change in academia. Administrative Science Quarterly, 41, 370-403. Hansford, B. C., & Hattie, J. A. (1982). Self-measures and achievement: Comparing a traditional review of the literature with a meta-analysis. Australian Journal of Education, 26, 71-75. Harter, S. (1990). Causes, correlates, and the functional role of global self-worth: A lifespan perspective. In R. Sternberg & J. Kolligan, Jr. (Eds.), Competence considered (pp. 67-97). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. James, W. (1963). The principles of psychology. New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston. (Original work published 1890) 112 Kahn, W. A. (1990). Psychological conditions of personal engagement and disengagement at work. Academy of Management Journal, 33, 692-724. Kerlinger, F. N., & Lee, H. B. (2000). Foundations in behavioral research (4th ed.). New York: Harcourt. Kramer, R. (1991). Intergroup relations and organizational dilemmas: The role of categorization processes. In L. Cummings & B. Shaw (Eds.), Research in organizational behavior (Vol. 13, pp. 191-228). Greenwich, CT: JAI Press. Labouvie-Vief, G., Orwell, L., Murphey, D., Chiodo, L., Krueger, C., Goguen, L., et al. (1994). Self and others in emotional development: A coding manual. Unpublished manuscript, Wayne State University at Detroit, MI. LaMastro, V. (2002). Commitment and perceived organizational support [Electronic version]. National Forum Journals, 13, 1-8. Mael, F. A. (2001). Organizational identification and its relevance to college alumni. Washington, DC: American Institutes for Research. Mael, F. A., & Ashforth, B. E. (1992). Alumni and their alma mater: A partial test of the reformulated model of organizational identification. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 13, 103-123. Mael, F. A., & Ashforth, B. E. (1995). Loyal from day one: Biodata, organizational identification, and turnover among newcomers. Personnel Psychology, 48, 309333. Mael, F. A., & Ashforth, B. E. (2001). Identification in work, war, sports, and religion: Contrasting the benefits and risks. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 31, 192-222. 113 Markus, H., & Wurf, E. (1987). The dynamic self-concept: A social psychological perspective. Annual Review of Psychology, 38, 299-337. Marsh, H. W. (1986). Global self-esteem: Its relation to specific facets of self-concept and their importance. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 51, 12241236. Marsh, H. W. (1998). A multidimensional, hierarchical model of self-concept: Theoretical and empirical justification. Journal of Educational Psychology, 82, 77-172. Marsh, H. W., Craven, R., & Debus, R. (1997). Self-concepts of young children 5 to 8 years of age: Measurement and multidimensional structure. Journal of Educational Psychology, 83, 377-392. Marsh, H. W., & Young, A. (1998). Top-down, bottom-up, and horizontal models: The direction of causality in multidimensional, hierarchical self-concept models [Electronic version]. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 75, 509-527. Marx, R. W., & Winne. P. H. (1980). Self-concept validation research: Some current complexities. Measurement and Evaluation in Guidance, 13, 72-82. Mathieu, J. E., & Zajac, D. M. (1980). A review and meta-analysis of the antecedents, correlates, and consequences of organizational commitment [Electronic version]. Psychological Bulletin, 108, 171-194. Messer, B., & Harter, S. (1986). Manual for the adult self-perception profile. Denver, CO: University of Denver, Department of Psychology. 114 Moore, C., Henderson, S., & Chawla, S. K. (1994, March). Stress and job commitment in the workforce: A healthcare and law enforcement example. Paper presented at the meeting of the Southwest Small Business Institute Association, Dallas, TX. Mowday, R. T., Porter, L. W., & Steers, R. M. (1982). Employee-organizational linkages: The psychology of commitment, absenteeism, and turnover. New York: Academic. Mowday, R. T., Steers, R. M., & Porter, L. W. (1979). The measurement of organizational commitment. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 14, 224-227. Murphy, J., & Schiller, J. (1992). Transforming America’s schools: An administrator’s call for action. LaSalle, IL: Open Court. O’Reilly, C. A., Chatman, J., & Caldwell, D. F. (1991). People and organizational culture: A profile comparison approach to assessing person-organization fit [Electronic version]. Academy of Management Journal, 34, 487-516. O’Reilly, C. A., Chatman, J., & Caldwell, D. F. (1996). Organizational commitment and psychological attachment: The effects of compliance, identification, and internalization on prosocial behavior [Electronic version]. Journal of Applied Psychology, 71, 492-499. Porter, L. W., Steers, R. M., Mowday, R. T., & Boulian, P. V. (1979). Organizational commitment, job satisfaction, and turnover among psychiatric technicians. Journal of Applied Psychology, 19, 603-609. Pratt, M. (1998). To be or not to be? Central questions in organizational identification. In D. A. Whetten & P. C. Godfrey (Eds.), Identity in organizations: Building theory through conversations (pp. 171-207). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 115 Reger, R. K., Gustafson, L. T., DeMarie, S. S., & Mullane, J. V. (1994). Reframing the organization: Why implementing total quality is easier said than done [Electronic version]. Academy of Management Review, 19, 565-584. Rose, L. C., & Gallup, A. M. (2001). The 33rd annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup poll of the public’s attitudes toward the public schools [Electronic version]. Phi Delta Kappan, 83, 1-30. Rosenberg, M. (1979). Conceiving the self. New York: Basic. Schwartz, H. S. (1987). Antisocial actions of committed organizational participants: An existential psychoanalytic perspective. Organization Studies, 8, 327-340. Serksnyte, L. (1999). Identities and organizations. New York: New School for Social Research, Department of Political and Social Science. Shamir, B. (1991). Meaning, self, and motivation in organizations. Organization Studies, 3, 405-424. Shavelson, R. J., Hubner, J. J., & Stanton, G. C. (1976). Self-concept: Recent developments in theory and method. New Directions for Testing and Measurement, 7, 25-43. Steele, C. M. (1998). The psychology of self-affirmation: Sustaining the integrity of the self. In L. Berkowitz (Ed.), Advances in experimental psychology (Vol. 21, pp. 261-302). New York: Academic. Tajfel, H., & Turner, J. C. (1986). The social identity theory of intergroups behavior. In S. Austin & W. Worchel (Eds.), Psychology of intergroup relations (2nd ed, pp. 7-24). Chicago: Nelson Hall. 116 Tayman, L. (2000, August). New Gallup poll shows public approval of public schools at all-time high. American Association of School Administrators. Retrieved September 17, 2001, from http://www.aasa.org/publications/ln/08_00/ 08_22_00gallup.htm U.S. Department of Education. (2002). No child left behind. Retrieved August 21, 2002, from http://www.nochildleftbehind.gov/overview/index.html Van Maanen, J., & Barley, S. R. (1984). Occupational communities: Culture and control in organizations. In L. Cummings & B. Shaw (Eds.), Research in organizational behavior (Vol. 13, pp. 191-228). Greenwich, CT: JAI Press. Wells, L. E., & Marwell, G. (1976). Self-esteem: Its conceptualization and measurement. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage. Zirkel, P. A. (1971). Self-concept and the “disadvantage” of ethnic group membership and mixture. Review of Educational Research, 41, 211-225. APPENDIXES 117 Appendix A Quantitative Instruments (reproduced as used) 118 119 ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTIFICATION SCALE Please rate the following statements by circling the number on the following rating scale that most closely represents your response. 1-strongly disagree 2-moderately disagree 3-slightly disagree 4-neither disagree nor agree 5-slightly agree 6-moderately agree 7-strongly agree 1. When someone criticizes my school, it feels like a personal insult. 1234567 2. When I talk about my school, I usually say “we” rather than “they”. 1234567 3. My school’s successes are my successes. 1234567 4. When someone praises my school, it feels like a personal compliment. 1234567 5. I feel a sense of ownership for my school. 1234567 6. If the values of this school were different, I would not be as attached to my school. 1234567 7. My attachment to this school is based primarily on the similarity of my values and those represented by my school. 1234567 8. Since starting this job, my personal values and those of this school have become more similar. 1234567 9. The reason I prefer this school to others is because of what it stands for, that is, its values. 1234567 10. The community appreciates this school and recognizes its importance. 1234567 11. I find this school is distinctively different over other schools. 1234567 12. I am proud of this school’s accomplishments. 1234567 13. Others see this school as a great organization. 1234567 14. There are many things about this school that are enduring to me. 1234567 15. When someone criticizes my school, I become defensive. 1234567 16. This school is more than a place where students are educated. 1234567 120 ORGANIZATIONAL IDENTIFICATION SCALE, continued Please rate the following statements by circling the number on the following rating scale that most closely represents your response. 1-strongly disagree 2-moderately disagree 3-slightly disagree 4-neither disagree nor agree 5-slightly agree 6-moderately agree 7-strongly agree 17. I am proud to tell people where I work. 1234567 18. When compared to other schools, this school is an example of educational excellence for which I feel a part. 1234567 19. When my school has a problem, I feel personal responsibility. 1234567 20. Others see this school as an example of educational excellence. 1234567 21. The students of this school are proud to attend here. 1234567 22. Parents would rather have their children at this school than any other. 1234567 ADULT SELF-PERCEPTION PROFILE This scale contains statements which allow you to describe yourself. This is not at test. There are no right or wrong answers. Please look at the first. It talks about two kinds of persons, and we want to know which person is most like you. Check only one box for each numbered sentence. Really true for me 1. Sort of true for me Sort of true for me Some adults are not satisfied with the way they do their work BUT other adults are satisfied with the way they do their work. Really true for me 121 2. 3. Some adults feel BUT other adults like to uncomfortable meet new people. when they have to meet new people BUT other adults are able Some adults feel that they often are too serious about their lives. to find humor in their lives. 4. Some adults like the way they are leading their lives. BUT other adults don’t like the way they are leading their lives. 5. Some adults feel they are very good at their work BUT other adults worry about whether they can do their work. 6. Some adults do not enjoy nurturing others BUT other adults enjoy being nurturant. 7. When some adults don’t understand something, it makes them feel stupid BUT other adults don’t necessarily feel stupid. 8. Some adults are very happy being the way they are BUT other adults would like to be different. 9. Some adults feel at ease with other people BUT other adults are quite shy. 10. Some adults sometimes question whether they are a worthwhile person BUT other adults feel that they are a worthwhile person. 11. Some adults are not very productive in their work BUT other adults are very productive in their work. 122 12. Some adults feel that they are intelligent BUT other adults question whether they are very intelligent. 13. Some adults are not very sociable BUT other adults are sociable. 14. Some adults are proud of their work. BUT other adults are not very proud of what they do. 15. Some adults are disappointed with themselves BUT other adults are quite pleased with themselves. 16. Some adults do not feel that they are very intellectually capable BUT other adults feel that they are intellectually capable. 17. Some adults can really laugh at themselves BUT other adults have a hard time laughing at themselves. 18. Some adults see caring or nurturing others as a contribution to the future BUT other adults do not gain a sense of contribution through nurturing others. 19. Some adults are dissatisfied with themselves BUT other adults are satisfied with themselves. 20. Some adults feel they are just as smart as other adults BUT other adults wonder if they are as smart. 21. Some adults do not enjoy fostering the growth of others BUT other adults enjoy fostering the growth of others. 22. BUT Some adults like the kind of person they are other adults would like to be someone else. 123 23. BUT Some adults feel they are enjoyable to be with other adults often question whether they are enjoyable to be with. 24. Some adults feel they have a good sense of humor BUT other adults wish their sense of humor was better. 25. Some adults feel they are good at nurturing others. BUT other adults are not very nurturant. 124 ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT QUESTIONNAIRE Listed below are a series of statements that represent possible feelings individuals might have about the school or organization for which they work. With respect to your own feelings about the school for which you are now working, please indicate the degree of your agreement or disagreement with each statement by circling one of the seven alternatives. 1-strongly disagree 2-moderately disagree 3-slightly disagree 4-neither disagree nor agree 5-slightly agree 6-moderately agree 7-strongly agree 1. I am willing to put in a great deal of effort beyond that normally expected in order to help this school be successful. 1234567 2. I talk up this organization to my friends as a great school to work for. 1234567 3. I feel very little loyalty to this school. 1234567 4. I would accept almost any type of job assignment in order to keep working for this school. 1234567 5. I find that my values and the school’s values are very similar. 1234567 6. I am proud to tell others that I am part of this school. 1234567 7. I could just as well be working for a different school as long as the type of work was similar. 1234567 8. This school really inspires the very best in me in the way of job performance. 1234567 9. It would take very little change in my present circumstances to cause me to leave this school. 1234567 10. I am extremely glad that I chose this school to work for over others I was considering at the time I joined. 1234567 11. There’s not too much to be gained by sticking with this school indefinitely. 1234567 12. Often I find it difficult to agree with this school’s policies on important matters relating to its employees 1234567 125 ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT QUESTIONNAIRE, continued 1-strongly disagree 2-moderately disagree 3-slightly disagree 4-neither disagree nor agree 5-slightly agree 6-moderatly agree 7-strongly agree 13. I really care about the fate of this school. 1234567 14. For me, this is the best of all possible schools for which to work. 1234567 15. Deciding to work for this school was a definite mistake on my part. 1234567 16. I feel that it is part of a teacher’s responsibility to work beyond the regular work day for the benefit of the school. 1234567 17. I feel that teachers should commit to the schools by sponsoring clubs and activities. 1234567 18. My desire is to teach my classes and be left out of all of the other activities. 1234567 19. When my school is honored, I know that I am partially responsible for its success. 1234567 20. I prefer working at this school over any other. 1234567 21. I have a strong commitment to this school. 1234567 22. The people in this school are like a family to me. 1234567 23. The administration appreciates what I do for this school. 1234567 24. Other teachers appreciate what I do for this school. 1234567 25. Students appreciate what I do for this school. 1234567 How many years have you taught? _________________ How many years have you taught at this school? ________________ How many hours per week do you spend working after regular hours? (Include coaching, clubs, lesson planning, staff development, etc.) _________________ Appendix B Qualitative Interview Protocol (reproduced as used) 126 127 QUALITATIVE INTERVIEW PROTOCOL Researcher Greeting Thank you for agreeing to this interview for my research. You may discontinue at any time but be assured that this is an anonymous interview. Your name and school will not be part of this study and will not be used in my analysis nor in the dissertation. I am very interested in how teachers perceive their schools and themselves and how those perceptions relate to a teacher’s strong identification with his or her school. I thank you, again, for your participation. _______________________________________________________________________ Interview question 1. If commitment is a strong belief in the goals of this school and a willingness to expend effort, on a scale from 1-to-10, one being the lowest or least, how committed are you to your school? Probe. On a scale of 1-to-10, rate your commitment level to your present school. Interview question 2. What do you personally consider to be special about this school that makes you want to work here? Probe. Why do you think your school is special? Do you appreciate the school’s population, administration, teamwork, or what makes this school a good place to work? Interview question 3. Educators receive a lot of criticism and praise from the public, media, and government. How do you feel about yourself with regard to your profession as a teacher? Probe. Are you ever sorry that you decided to become a teacher? Do you feel the teaching profession is scrutinized more than other professions? 128 Interview question 4. On a scale of 1-to-10, one being the lowest or least, how committed are you to the profession of education? Probe. On a scale of 1-to-10, rate your commitment level for being a teacher. Interview question 5. How many extra hours do you put into your job and does the effort benefit you? Probe. How often do you work beyond the regular school day? In what ways does it help you to work extra hours? Interview question 6. Name the things that you personally consider to be the most distinctive and enduring about teaching. Probe. What is important to you about a school: the type of students, the administration, friends as fellow teachers, sports, pride and so forth? Interview question 7. What needs to happen for teachers to become more committed? Probe. What things are important to teachers? What do teachers want and need to improve their dedication to the job? Interview question 8. How many years have you taught? Probe. How many years of experience do you have as a teacher? Appendix C Flowchart of Statistical Analysis 129 Distribute Survey No Return Returned yes Follow-up Survey Yes Preliminary Review and Correction Errors No Reject Correctable No errors Chronbach Alpha (reliability) Yes No No Yes Reject Cross comparison of data SPSS 11 No or poor results Yes Multiple Regression Each section Yes Yes t-test Reject No Accept Hypothesis (reject null) Write conclusion Null hypothesis is good Decide next step in analysis Appendix D Permission to Conduct the Study 131 132 133 134 Appendix E Informed Consent Form and Introductory Letter 135 136 137 Appendix F Compilation of Interview Results 138 Table F1 Compilation of Interview Results Interviewee A B C D 1 9 Family-type support, caring peers. 10 10 2 10 8 20 3 10 Atmosphere, other teachers. Kids are different; all are helpful and friendly. The principal; friends I teach with; well-run school; it’s home. 8 8 4 6 10 5 We try to do the right things for kids. E True care for students; satisfaction from my commitment when their lives are changed Satisfaction; watching kids learn. My colleagues; the kids you help; the ones who say thank you, making a difference. Students I made a difference with. Camaraderie among teachers. Community connection other professions do not have. F G More accountability, financial rewards, and recognition 5 Salary; get back to being able to teach what you want; too much state control; decrease paperwork; smaller class size. Depends on individual, maybe money. Not me, I want praise and encouragement. 32 Besides money, they have to feel and be told that they are valuable. They don’t feel warmth and support of the community. I touch the future; I teach. Most teachers have to say that to themselves to keep going everyday. You don’t do it for the principal or parents. It’s the kid on the second row. I was happy to say my mother was a teacher; I don’t think my kids are. 30 29 (table continues) Interviewee A B C D E 5 8 Caring for individual students. 10 4 Students having an impact on their lives. 6 10 I graduated from this school, so it is special to me. 10 17 7 5 The staff and teachers are supportive. 8 15 You can see that it makes a difference when the light comes on. A mom complimented me this year, it felt so good. I enjoy working with the children. 8 7 Kids come first; personal concern for kids. 9 10 9 9 The kids. 10 20 10 10 The leadership support; the kids need me. 10 25 One of the only professions where you have a real impact on a child’s life. In high school, it affects the rest of their lives. Influence we have on the students. When you work hard to do a lesson and the students that get turned around because of my intervention F G More appreciation; money would help, but it’s not the key. Recognize how hard we work and what we tolerate. Administration has forgotten what it is like in the classroom. I feel insecure because I’m new to teaching. A lot more praise and pats on the back. 36 The need to feel support of administration and public. Good teachers are quitting early because they are not given enough support. Need more input into how school is run. We need more team work. More support to people new in the profession. 4 More recognition for professional growth. Teachers must be willing to work longer hours than expected; to give freely of personal time. 2 24 24 6 (table continues) Interviewee A B C D Students are put first and their needs. 10 10 9 Being friends with other teachers; school climate is strong; positive principal. The students. 10 Administration supports me. I like the school philosophy. The students; being a part of their lives. 10 Teachers are very welcoming. 10 11 12 10 13 10 14 9 15 10 16 6 10 10 E F G Students themselves when Forget money and public opinion. they accomplish skills and Do it for self-pride. Committed you can see they’re learning. teachers know that they do make a difference. 5 Kids remember you when Appreciation for what they do! they are older. They come back and tell you what they learned. Impact. 20 Ability to observe the More respect in the form of salary, growth of kids and be a part praise. Legislators need to leave of this process. education alone. Stop the pendulum swing. 5 Contact with students. They Accountability; someone who better themselves and knows what I am doing to check accomplish goals. on me; praise and encouragement. 25 The students, our relationship. I still communicate with graduated students. 4 Touching the lives of my students. Teachers need to realize what really matters. Plan everyday; keep it fresh. They need to enjoy what they’re doing. The nation’s perspective needs to change about the importance of education. The reason kids are in school needs to be supported from home. 9 30 9 11 20 10 (table continues) Interviewee A B C D E 17 10 10 25 It gives me a chance to be creative and innovative. I can reach students through theses methods. 18 9 The makeup of administration and teachers; they work together for the mission of the school I have a lot invested at this school and what it stands for. 5 10 The children. 19 8 Mrs. Player, the principal. 7 8 Moments with the kids that keep you going. 20 6 They are very nice people. 8 5 21 8 The diverse population 9 22 Kids give hugs and appreciate you. When you explain and a light comes on, and you know you made a difference. When kids understand things, their eyes light up. You can tell they appreciate it. F G More accountability; teachers having to get rid of old lesson plans and the way they have always done things and change with the flow of education. We need to be recognized as professionals. Parents and politics shouldn’t delegate how we teach. There are too many restrictions on teachers. Our society needs to support education and what we are teaching. Give teachers more control in the classroom. I am a professional; trust my judgment. Appreciate what I do. They are already extremely committed with what they do with so little. 16 More support from parents and administrators in discipline matters. If I could get the administrators in the classroom for 1 week, it would really make a difference. 36 30 26 .5 (table continues) Interviewee A B C D 22 7 8 8 I’m the last line for a student. When my students reach a goal, it is a change for a lifetime. 23 8 Special areas are a vital part of the school, music, P. E., exceptional student education , and so forth. The commitment of the staff to the whole process. 7 4 Opportunity to really influence someone’s life. Intervention and redirecting of families and children to be educated. 24 9 10 14 I enjoy the fact that I can make a difference in a child’s life. Sometimes parents don’t have time and I can meet a child’s need. Detail to individual kids. E F G Public needs to value us. First, value education by raising our salaries. Then they will not just say we teach because we can’t do anything else. To be respected as a professional is very important. People must understand where education is today. The world has changed. Their past perception of being in school does not let them know it. People don’t understand how to compare schools and what we handle. The public must understand more. For example, the book, $100,000 Teacher. They do need to insist on qualified people for teachers. We want to be more supported and appreciated. We don’t feel we are taken seriously and help with high esteem in the community. The salary doesn’t reflect a professional image. When you give your all and all you get is criticism – I don’t see how many teachers keep going. 25 13 3 (table continues) Interviewee A B C D E F G 25 10 We have aboveaverage students from military families that have expectations and good behavior. 10 5 Having students that I have taught come back and tell me how they appreciate it. 18 26 9 The principal is very committed and set a high standard. 10 30 One can see a personal impact. It is not a concept; it’s real and you can see it. You see the light come on and you don’t have to wait to see the results like other professions. 27 8 My autonomy in using instructional strategies. 10 25 The bonds one makes with students; the light bulb comes on. Parents need to get more involved. I perceive that teachers are not held in as high esteem as when I was going to school. Class size? Who cares? As long as you have well-disciplined kids, you can teach many more at one time. Our society as a whole does not elevate the teaching profession. Then that affects parents and students. Teaching is an honorable and good profession. Also, get rid of the couple of “rotten apple” teachers that affect us all. There was a time when teachers were honored. It comes down to money. Pay more and better people will interview. Also, no tenure. Yearly contracts for teachers. There is not enough accountability. Teachers should be observed anytime and held to task like any other profession. 1 4 (table continues) Interviewee A 28 9 B I feel we put the children first. C D E 10 10 The ability to touch the future and change tomorrow. 29 8 The sense of community and my kids attending the same school. 9 11 The rewards of watching children learn something. It’s a calling to teach. 30 10 A most wonderful faculty. 10 7 I enjoy working with other teachers. I make an impact on students. F G I don’t know. It’s not anything we can teach teachers but must come from within. More accolades for some teachers. I hear so many that say they need more recognition. Public appreciation. The article in the paper today was discouraging. Teachers have to feel they are an important part. Leadership needs to make teachers feel respected and appreciated. I once got a thank-you note from my principal for working extra hours at a fair. It was nice. If you did a poll at my school, then Los Angeles, then Miami, they would say the greatest thing we face is a kid’s home life. If we could improve students’ home life, it would make a difference. More money, recognition, would help, and more hours in the day. We need our time frame adjusted to get it all in. 11 20 39 (table continues) Interviewee 31 32 A 10 B Other teachers. 8 My school’s reputation. C D E F 10 20 Some kids that comes back and say that I made a difference. The first thing in my mind is money. But, most of us are so committed now, we couldn’t be more committed. 9 12 It puts me in a situation where I’m available to kids. I have them a small time to make a difference. I want to be effective as a teacher. I already work with lots of 13 committed teachers. We already put in lots of time. I resent being called “staff.” I am faculty; don’t pull out the professionalism. I know that we all work for the good of the students, but teachers are faculty and should maintain that elevated standing for respect. Note: A = Self-reported commitment level, 1-10. B = What do you personally consider to be special about this school that makes you want to work here? C = Self-reported professional self-concept, 1-10. D = Extra hours worked per week. E = Name the things that you personally consider to be the most distinctive and enduring about teaching (professional identity). F = What needs to happen for teachers to become more committed? G = Number of years in teaching. G 29