University of Oklahoma researchers research educator wellness and career satisfaction
Researchers from the University of Oklahoma (OU) are teaming up with colleagues from several other nations, including Australia, to focus on early childhood educators’ wellness and career satisfaction.
The Happy Teacher Project, a research initiative of the OU Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education, has worked to address the urgent need across the state for recruiting, retaining and strengthening the early childhood education workforce.
Now team members are looking beyond international borders to learn from and help other communities facing some of the same challenges.
The new program is being led by Kyong Ah Kwon, Ph.D., early childhood professor and principal investigator for OU’s Happy Teacher Project, assisted by co-principal investigators for the Happy Teacher Global Project, Timothy G. Ford, Ph.D., and Wonkyung Jang, Ph.D.
“Our Happy Teacher Project team has studied educator well-being and been very successful in making broad impacts on early childhood practice and policy, and then we talk to others in the field and realize that different countries, even among industrialized nations, share some of the same issues,” Kwon said.
Kwon soon determined that researchers from other countries and her team could learn a lot from each other, so she formed a group of scholars to exchange ideas.
Happy Teacher Project Oklahoma has interfaced with leading scholars from Singapore, Australia, Hong Kong, Finland and South Korea. Representatives from two countries, Hong Kong and South Korea, have joined the cross-cultural research to replicate the Happy Teacher Project in their areas. Two others, Finland and Germany, are considering replicating some parts.
A group from South Korea, led by Jihyun Sung, Ph.D, recently visited Oklahoma and OU’s Happy Teacher Project team. Sung’s group was recently awarded a grant from the National Research Foundation of Korea and will soon begin work on their own early childhood educator well-being research project.
Sung brought several graduate students along, and the group heard from Happy Teacher Project researchers about holistic wellness for teachers and how to better structure environments to meet teachers’ needs.
They also visited Tulsa Educare, the Cherokee Nation Head Start program, Oklahoma City Educare and Pierce Early Education Center as their partner sites.
“Dr. Kwon introduced the Happy Teacher Project at a conference in Korea, and I realized it is beneficial for teachers’ working conditions and well-being,” Sung said. “That was my ‘a-ha moment’ when I decided I needed to study the same things in Korea.”
While still in its infancy, the Happy Teacher Global Project has established three early measures for moving forward. The international partners and those considering membership meet virtually on a monthly basis, they have organized symposiums for U.S.-based conferences, and they are in the beginning stages of a cross-cultural research study.
Kwon also admits to having more long-range goals. While the research being done is an important first step, ultimately, she and the group would like to have more influence on policymakers globally.
This, she believes, would truly make a difference in the lives of early childhood teachers. She also acknowledges how working with these international partners can allow her team to influence and learn from others.
“That’s a big challenge, encouraging people to work together, which the Happy Teacher Project does well. The long-term goal is to collaborate with many different areas to ensure teachers’ well-being is improved and to make a lasting difference for teachers and children.”
Learn more about the project here.
Photo shows the Happy Teacher Project team and visiting South Korean Happy Teacher Project Team. Photo by Jeramy Pappas.
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