Teaching requires emotional work. Some days teachers experience positive emotions (joy, pride, hope) in conjunction with students learning new concepts or forming new relationships. Other days teachers experience negative emotions (frustration, annoyance, anger) in response to negative conflict between themselves and their students. The ability to interact with students, navigate emotions and appropriately express or suppress them can be challenging for educators. The emotional labor completed to express or suppress emotions based on job standards and norms (display rules) is explicitly studied in most service industries, but continues to be understudied in education. This paper provides a descriptive analysis of the emotional labor an...
This diary study examined the role of teachers' relationship perceptions (closeness, conflict, depen...
Emotional exhaustion (EE) is the core component in the study of teacher burnout, with significant im...
While the similarities between emotion regulation (Gross in J Personal Soc Psychol 74:224–237, 1998a...
Teaching requires emotional work. Some days teachers experience positive emotions (joy, pride, hope...
A large empirical body of literature suggests that teachers make a difference in the lives of studen...
Emotional labor refers to the efforts workers engage in to manage the expression of their feelings i...
Is teaching emotional labor? Are teachers selling their own emotions in exchange for money? To exami...
Over the last century, the service industry became the greatest provider of jobs in the United State...
It has been postulated that emotions play essential roles in conflict situations and that excessive ...
The concept of emotional labor is increasingly gaining significance within the human factor-centered...
© The Author(s) 2017. This study investigated the emotional labor involved in two forms of sport ser...
This paper examines some of the emotional issues that can interfere with teachers ' professiona...
For quite some time, research has shown an inclination for the portrayal of teaching as a primarily ...
This article addresses the issue of teacher educators emotion display when teaching and interacting ...
This diary study examined the role of teachers' relationship perceptions (closeness, conflict, depen...
This diary study examined the role of teachers' relationship perceptions (closeness, conflict, depen...
Emotional exhaustion (EE) is the core component in the study of teacher burnout, with significant im...
While the similarities between emotion regulation (Gross in J Personal Soc Psychol 74:224–237, 1998a...
Teaching requires emotional work. Some days teachers experience positive emotions (joy, pride, hope...
A large empirical body of literature suggests that teachers make a difference in the lives of studen...
Emotional labor refers to the efforts workers engage in to manage the expression of their feelings i...
Is teaching emotional labor? Are teachers selling their own emotions in exchange for money? To exami...
Over the last century, the service industry became the greatest provider of jobs in the United State...
It has been postulated that emotions play essential roles in conflict situations and that excessive ...
The concept of emotional labor is increasingly gaining significance within the human factor-centered...
© The Author(s) 2017. This study investigated the emotional labor involved in two forms of sport ser...
This paper examines some of the emotional issues that can interfere with teachers ' professiona...
For quite some time, research has shown an inclination for the portrayal of teaching as a primarily ...
This article addresses the issue of teacher educators emotion display when teaching and interacting ...
This diary study examined the role of teachers' relationship perceptions (closeness, conflict, depen...
This diary study examined the role of teachers' relationship perceptions (closeness, conflict, depen...
Emotional exhaustion (EE) is the core component in the study of teacher burnout, with significant im...
While the similarities between emotion regulation (Gross in J Personal Soc Psychol 74:224–237, 1998a...