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Gaining a better understanding of teacher absenteeism: How structural and organizational factors impact a teacher’s decision to be absent

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.33.8625

Keywords:

teacher absenteeism, job stress, perceived organizational support, mental health, teacher burnout

Abstract

This study explores the reasons for chronic teacher absenteeism, which is a growing concern due to the resulting expenses and implications on student learning. Twenty-one elementary teachers from seven different Michigan school districts were interviewed about their experiences with and perceptions of teacher absenteeism. Using interpretive lenses from the management literature on employee absenteeism and education literature on teacher mental health and burnout, chronically absent teachers in this study used paid time off for job-related mental health more often than for personal reasons compared to non-chronically absent teachers. Participants cited working conditions that often drive teacher turnover as common reasons for decisions to be absent such as student behaviors, large class sizes, accountability pressures, lack of building and administrative support, lack of resources, increased workload, performing additional duties above and beyond teaching, and compensation dissatisfaction. Teachers were largely unaware of district attendance and incentive policies. Some felt teacher pay was low and inconsistent with the stress of the job, using these views to justify taking more days off as part of their total compensation package. These findings suggest that structural and organizational factors can evoke feelings of teacher burnout and contribute significantly to chronic absenteeism for teachers in this study.

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Author Biographies

Jacqueline A. Gardner,Michigan State University

Jacqueline Gardner is the Director of Data and Evaluation for the Office of K-12 Outreach in the College of Education at Michigan State University. She studies teacher absenteeism, the educator workforce, and the culture and climate of schools and districts.

A. Chris Torres,The University of Michigan

Chris Torres is an associate professor of educational policy and leadership at the University of Michigan. He studies urban and low-income school improvement efforts related to school choice, leadership, school turnaround, charter schools, and educator retention and turnover.

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Published

2025-06-10

How to Cite

Gardner, J. A., & Torres, A. C. (2025). Gaining a better understanding of teacher absenteeism: How structural and organizational factors impact a teacher’s decision to be absent.Education Policy Analysis Archives,33. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.33.8625

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Copyright (c) 2025 Jacqueline A. Gardner, A. Chris Torres

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This work is licensed under aCreative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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