Job Stress, Job Satisfaction, Self-Efficacy and Turnover Intentions across Socio-Demographic Characteristics of Government Secondary School Teachers in Greater Mbarara

dc.contributor.authorInnocent Nkwatsibwe
dc.contributor.authorAloysius Rukundo
dc.contributor.authorSudi Balimuttajjo
dc.date.accessioned2025-09-29T09:20:37Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.description.abstractPurpose: The study examined the levels job stress, job satisfaction, self-efficacy and turnover intentions across socio-demographic characteristics of government secondary school teachers in greater Mbarara. Materials and Methods: The cross-sectional, quantitative study adopted census strategy select schools and simple random sampling to select respondents. Data was collected from 470 teachers using self-administered questionnaires. Data was analyzed using frequencies, means, standard deviations, independent samples t test and one-way ANOVA. Findings: Generally, teachers reported moderate job stress, job satisfaction and turnover intentions while self-efficacy was high. High stress was reported among males (M=2.962), teachers aged 40-49 years (M=2.693), teachers with master’s degree (M=3.17), teachers with an experience of ˂ 1year (M=2.91), arts teachers (M=2.93), teachers on government payroll (M=2.87) and teachers in rural settings (M=2.88). High job satisfaction was reported among females (M=3.657), diploma holders (M=3.653), teachers on government payroll (M=3.596), teachers with an experience of ˂ 1year (M=3.691), science teachers (M=3.681), teachers aged ˂ 30years (M=3.787) and teachers in urban schools (M=3.62). Self-efficacy was high among teachers with ˂ 1year experience (M=3.497), females (M=3.495), teachers in urban schools (M=3.459), teachers with master’s degree (M=3.454), teachers on government payroll (M=3.358), science teachers (M=3.403) and teachers aged ˃ 50 years (M=3.455). Turnover intentions were high among teachers with master’s degree (M=3.004), teachers aged ˃ 50 years (M=2.801), teachers on PTA payroll (M=2.662), females (M=2.6001), teachers with an experience of ˂ 1 year (M=2.609), arts teachers (M=2.701) and teachers in rural schools (M=2.608). Implications to Theory, Practice and Policy: There is need for development of mentorship programs to help early-career teachers navigate professional challenges to reduce stress and build confidence, enhance job satisfaction so as to mitigate turnover intentions.
dc.identifier.citationNkwatsibwe, I,. Rukundo, A,. Balimuttajjo, S,. (2025),Job Stress, Job Satisfaction, Self-Efficacy and Turnover Intentions across Socio-Demographic Characteristics of Government Secondary School Teachers in Greater Mbarara:American Journal of Education and Practice
dc.identifier.urihttps://ir.must.ac.ug/handle/123456789/4034
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherAmerican Journal of Education and Practice
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United Statesen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/
dc.subjectStress
dc.subjectSatisfaction
dc.subjectSelf-Efficacy
dc.subjectTurnover
dc.subjectTeachers
dc.titleJob Stress, Job Satisfaction, Self-Efficacy and Turnover Intentions across Socio-Demographic Characteristics of Government Secondary School Teachers in Greater Mbarara
dc.typeArticle

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