Teacher Turnover in Malawi's Ministry of Education: Realities and Challenges

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Teacher Turnover in Malawi's Ministry of Education: Realities and Challenges
Abstract
The teaching profession is no longer a concern of academicians but the public in general who yearn for positive results. Internationally, the profession is continuously beset by several serious problems. One of the most serious problems in the teaching profession is teacher turnover. Governments are finding it difficult to retain teachers in schools. In Malawi, this problem is profound and overwhelming, even by Sub-Saharan standards. The paper heavily relies on secondary data derived from general trends and observations of several research findings as well as government publications, newspapers and several academic papers. The paper argues that main cause of this problem in Malawi can be attributed to general poor working conditions. The paper further argues that retention measures derived by the Malawi government may take time to bear fruits and it is unlikely that they can seriously affect teachers positively because they do not address the basic immediate needs of the teachers. (Contains 1 footnote.)
Publication
International Education Journal
Volume
8
Issue
1
Pages
89-99
Date
2007/04/00
Language
en
ISSN
1443-1475
Short Title
Teacher Turnover in Malawi's Ministry of Education
Accessed
09/12/2022, 21:39
Library Catalogue
ERIC
Extra
Publisher: Australian and New Zealand Comparative and International Education Society ERIC Number: EJ841708
Citation
Kayuni, H., & Tambulasi, R. (2007). Teacher Turnover in Malawi’s Ministry of Education: Realities and Challenges. International Education Journal, 8(1), 89–99. https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ841708