The Structural Dimensions of “Double-Qualified” Teachers’ Work Role Transition Competence and Its Generation Mechanism
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review and Concept Definition
2.1. Literature Review
2.2. Concept Definition
3. Research Methodology and Research Design
3.1. Research Methodology
3.2. Theoretical Sampling
3.3. Data Collection
3.4. Data Analysis
- (1)
- Open Coding
- (2)
- Spindle Coding
- (3)
- Selective Coding
- (4)
- Theoretical Saturation Test
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Structural Dimensions of “Double-Qualified” Teachers’ Work Role Transition Competence
4.2. Mechanism for Generating Work Role Transition Competence for “Double-Qualified” Teachers
5. Conclusions and Discussion
5.1. Research Findings
5.2. Theoretical Implications
- (1)
- This study breaks away from and extends established theories of work role transitions. Previous work on role transition studies has mainly been focused on cross-industry [60] and transition patterns [61], with no consideration of the factors of individuals themselves [22].The authors of this study developed the concept of work role transition competence from the perspective of individual competence, and they explored the structural elements of work role transition competence and its generation mechanism with a sample of “double-qualified” teachers in higher education institutions, expanding the research boundary of work role transition theory and providing a new theory for the study of “how to successfully achieve work role transition”.
- (2)
- The results of this study further clarify the conceptual content and structural features of work role transition competence. The success of a work role transition is highly personal and multifactorial [62]. In recent years, many scholars have identified work role transition competence as one of the most important influencing factors in successfully adapting to new roles [8,9]. However, previous research has been focused on work role transition competence in a relatively fragmented manner, and its definitions and connotations are not yet clear. The authors of this study defined and discerned the operationalization of the concept of work role transition competence, clarified its definitional connotations, and used a grounded theory approach to construct a complete structural dimension of work role transition grounded theory, thus laying the foundation for future research in this direction.
- (3)
- A model of the role of antecedent variables of work role transition competence was constructed based on the JDCS model and employee learning theory, providing a theoretical framework for subsequent research. Previous studies have only been sporadically focused on the role of competence in work role transition [7,63]. Furthermore, there is a lack of in-depth research on the mechanism of generating work role transition competence, and no logical relationship has been constructed between the antecedent and causal variables of work role transition competence. The authors of this study integrated the JDCS model and employee learning theory, and they constructed a model of the influence of antecedent variables on the development of work role transition competence based on the logical framework of “demand–context–learning–competence”, which compensates for the shortcomings of previous studies and provides a systematic theoretical framework for subsequent studies.
- (4)
- This study is an echo of more qualitative research in the field of organizational behavior (OB) for theoretical construction in China. In recent years, qualitative interview research in the field of OB has received increasing international attention, with the number and quality of studies growing and improving [64]. The number of qualitative studies in the OB and HR disciplines in China is still relatively small [65]. For this reason, scholars have called for a shift towards empirical research as the most legitimate methodological orientation and the use of more diverse research methods to study Chinese management practices [66]. The present study is part of this trend of theoretical inquiry.
5.3. Practical Insights
- (1)
- The structure of work role transition competence explored in this study helps teachers to more objectively and accurately view their work role transition, as well as to apply it in practice. At the first level, teachers will be more aware of the importance of leaving their old roles as soon as possible; at the second level, they will be more aware of and able to manage their negative emotions and to develop positive motivation to change their roles; at the third level, they will be more open to the goals of their new roles; and at the fourth level, they will be more proactive in developing their relationship networks and laying the foundation for the effective use of resources. Awareness and effort at these levels will help teachers achieve faster and more successful work role transitions.
- (2)
- The model of work role transition competence developed in this study can also help higher education institutions further improve their human resource management practices. According to the study, individual learning is the main driving force of the ability to change work roles, but work role demands, individual self-efficacy, and social support also have important influences. Therefore, in practice, in addition to actively encouraging and motivating teachers to take the initiative to learn, higher education institutions should also further improve the corresponding human resource management practices to stimulate teachers to generate and strengthen their work role transition competence. For instance, more effective communication with teachers can be used in terms of job design and other aspects to form appropriate pressure that can stimulate active learning, forming a situation conducive to teachers’ perceived support in terms of the development platform, work funding, information support, and system construction, as well as building an atmosphere in terms of organizational culture and leadership style that allows teachers to feel respected and accommodated.
5.4. Research Limitations and Future Research Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
No. | Category | Raw Data Statement (Initial Concept) |
---|---|---|
1 | Capacity demands | A1: A teacher should have the ability to handle actual practical work (practical business skills) A14: One of the differences between us as a tertiary institution and an undergraduate institution is that it places more emphasis on skill-based capabilities (skills and operational capabilities) A20: Mainly includes project-based practical teaching skills, applied research-oriented technical skills, an understanding of “double-qualified”, and a reserve of self-development experiences (multiple competencies required) |
2 | Knowledge and skill demands | A3: You’re all about practice, no theory, and students think you’re blowing smoke here, right? (Theoretical knowledge) A8: You have to speak deeply and thoroughly so that the students’ words are acceptable and you still have practical experience, otherwise it doesn’t work (industry experience) A22: Under the general background and the trend of a multi-major sportsperson, three-teaching reform, and integration of industry–education–competition, the certification and the technical, practical experience of “double-qualified” teachers are more conducive to feedback in education and teaching (practical skills) |
3 | Workload | A3: They want us to do this again, but teaching is impossible (heavy workload) A18: There is a relatively large shortage of teachers, and for various reasons, professional teachers are required to take on larger in-school workloads (non-teaching workloads) A29: Classroom tasks or other such trivialities will still be heavy (teaching workload) |
4 | Working hours | A5: It takes a lot of time and there is no way for this time to be reflected in your workload (hours worked) A8: The person’s time is also limited, and then all of a sudden, he is asked to do other aspects of the task, especially when the number of task sets is explicitly so large that he will surely ignore them (time requirements) A24: A problem is that the teachers’ time is limited (time problem) |
5 | Role perception | A5: Do you have that dedication, or do you have one of the sentiments we talk about? (Character sentiment) A15: “Double-qualified” teachers are dual-role teachers, with a good interface between industry and education (role function) A16: As an instructor, you should know the art of vocal language, understand editing ideas, and understand the use of editing software to better guide your students to the competition (role orientation) |
6 | Self-assessment | A12: I find that my knowledge base is still a bit, I can’t adapt to teaching and I need to improve it (knowledge base assessment) A13: This is the time to think to yourself if what I have is just not valuable (work meaningful assessment) A21: Corporate experience and hands-on project experience have been something I’ve been lacking (practical experience assessment) |
7 | Role goal planning | A14: First of all, you have to have a goal yourself, that is, you preach and teach, you have to keep drilling in this piece of skills, and then you still have to go back to the business from time to time (clear role goals) A23: To be a qualified teacher of vocational education, the grounding point is to be responsible and caring and to establish an equal, harmonious, and mutually respectful relationship with each student (qualified role identity) A26: He/she will first take a teaching qualification, then plan to obtain a teaching qualification, and then a teaching series title before planning his/her corporate posting (conversion path planning) |
8 | Old role attachment | A3: I’ve been used to this kind of stuff for years, so I can deal with it anyway (playing inertia) A24: I chose to be a teacher after studying a foreign language, I never thought of going to a trading company to be a translator (identifying with the old role) A30: The psychological state is different, for example, for teachers who come from school, when they first arrive, their perception is not changed (perception is not changed) |
9 | Negative emotions | A2: Why is one nervous? Because after all, I had not gotten a teacher training course (nervousness) A5: With all this heavy work, the teachers still have to do it, and they are resisting (resistance) A13: It is difficult to implement, and I don’t know how to do this in the end, which is a very confusing point for me now (confused emotions) |
10 | Positive emotions | A12: After being a teacher for more than 10 years, I suddenly felt that having the opportunity to go there would give me a new motivation (new passion) for living A26: His willingness to go from business to teaching as a teacher means that he is still able to accept the change of job in this capacity, so he is taking the initiative to develop his ability to be a qualified teacher (initiative) A28: If you want to do well in this business, then you will take the initiative to absorb some more content, and you will have some endogenous motivation to do better (enterprising spirit) |
11 | Role network construction | A6: You don’t get it just by going to a competition alone, you have to form a team (team bonding) A10: We need to closely match the needs of our profession and strengthen our ties with companies, and then, in turn, promote our growth (corporate relations) A27: You also have to have some industry recognition (peer relations) |
12 | Access to resources | A5: How can you have access to some external resources to help your growth? (Resource acquisition) A28: Look for them and see what new trends there are at the moment, right? What are some of the new needs, what did they use before, or what information can be shared about the industry? (Information sharing) A29: I will be a little bit better than other teachers because I have done administrative work for the league committee, and can get some of this funding (getting funding) |
13 | Network maintenance | A2: You have to put yourself in the shoes of others (altruistic thinking) A8: First meet some professionals, then get to know them one by one (proliferation of relationships) A29: Outsiders are also required to do their own, including the project of the Science and Technology Bureau, including some other technical services, etc., they need you to find their own (active contact) |
14 | Knowledge and experience transfer | A8: Some key clues are removed, not real cases, not just cases I’ve dealt with, but cases I’ve not dealt with (real case adaptations) A24: He has to learn to turn his hands-on stuff, the stuff that’s really on the front line of the business, into content that can be used in lectures (hands-on knowledge translation) A27: They must translate and standardize their engineering experience (practical experience transfer) |
15 | Role change confidence | A8: Can you take responsibility for your practical skills as a dual teacher? (Confidence in taking responsibility) A9: You ask him to make up a program to process something against a book and he will, but I bring something from outside to show him how it is processed and he is afraid of doing it (the confidence to try) A15: Lack of confidence in completing corporate projects as agreed (confidence in completing tasks) |
16 | Informative support | A6: Chats about this kind of stuff and talking about it bring out a lot of sparks (sharing information) A22: Lack of information sources for teachers themselves in exploring opportunities for school–enterprise cooperation projects and lack of understanding of government support policies (policy information support) A29: We were working on a crowdsourcing space, and then with that opportunity, we were able to get some information with some of the companies out there (source of information) |
17 | Instrumental support | A1: External management mechanism, for example, I set him a task, must understand some of the processes and what can be achieved to do the assessment; this is how to solve a problem (system improvement) A9: I go to practice, do I have group equipment and supplies, and do I have a teacher to teach me to overcome this difficulty? (Tools and equipment support) A29: It is not available locally, you only have the field or what have you, and your costs will be high (funding support) |
18 | Emotional support | A6: I don’t think the leaders went through the effort to fight for this (the leaders took it seriously) A14: The teachers encouraged me and said it’s okay, just go and practice more, practice always makes perfect (encouragement from colleagues) A26: Many teachers still need someone to guide them when they come in (colleagues guide them) |
19 | Learning guarantee | A14: What is your own goal? You will go to the hanging, your design is what kind of effect you want to achieve, you will go to the corresponding person to take some kind of behavior (learning planning) A21: Teachers taking the gold-standard industry certification exams also require a lot of time and effort to study (study energy investment) A23: Use the summer to practice in enterprises on attachment and participate in real engineering projects in enterprises to enhance one’s professional practice and social service skills (study time) |
20 | Level of participation | A9: We send to relevant companies that are more in tune, but the mentality is not adjusted; the teacher does not have the mentality of an employee, so he does not learn the real skills (learning mind control) A10: By doing the same work, you get the whole process right (full process learning) A16: It will also be conscious of industry standards and requirements for real projects (e.g., corporate identity film shooting and editing) during corporate practice (participation in real projects) |
21 | Knowledge absorption | A2: Adapting to the development of knowledge and the updating of knowledge, you have to combine this with frontline production to be able to update and upgrade your knowledge and skills (receiving knowledge updates) A6: In the process of communication with them, you can absorb a lot of things again, on the current plight of his business, and the need inside the current business for students to master skills (knowledge skills absorption) A30: He has not experienced it, has not participated in it, he has not understood it thoroughly, so he can only say that he has learned the surface level (knowledge absorption) |
Appendix B
Example of a Theoretical Saturation Test
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Main Category | Corresponding Categories | Relationship Connotations |
---|---|---|
Work role demands | Workload | Job demands are indirect factors that trigger the ability to change job roles. They consist of a combination of workload, work time, competency needs, and knowledge and skill needs. Workload determines the demands of work time, individual competencies, knowledge, and skills. Having strong work competencies, knowledge, and skills facilitates a reduction in individuals’ work time and reduces the pressure of work role demands. |
Working hours | ||
Capacity demands | ||
Knowledge and skill demands | ||
New role awareness power | Role perception | New role awareness is a dimension of the ability to transition into a work role. It includes the knowledge and understanding of a role’s behavioral norms, the correct perception of the self and role status, and the ability to establish realistic and clear work role goals. |
Self-assessment | ||
Role goal planning | ||
Old role disengagement | Old role attachment | Role detachment is a dimension of the ability to change roles at work. By detaching from old role attachments and identifying with new role identities, one can truly psychologically embrace the role change and develop the ability to change work roles. |
Psychological adjustment skills | Negative emotions | Psychological adjustment is a dimension of the ability to change work roles. During the transition period, individuals need to effectively manage negative emotions that come with changing roles, such as confusion, resistance, and struggle, and develop positive emotions that actively adapt to the change. |
Positive emotions | ||
Resource reserve capacity | Role network construction | The ability to change job roles also includes the ability to build a network of relationships for the new role; to actively maintain existing networks; to be aware of, grasp, and use favorable resources; and to effectively transfer learning and prior experience to the new role, thereby reserving resources for the new job role. |
Access to resources | ||
Network maintenance | ||
Knowledge and experience transfer | ||
Social support | Instrumental support | The instrumental, informative, and emotional support provided by supervisors, colleagues, partners, organizations, etc., together constitute social support. Social support is one of the facilitating conditions for the generation and development of the ability to change work roles. |
Informative support | ||
Emotional support | ||
Role breadth self-efficacy | Role change confidence | A positive sense of role breadth self-efficacy can be developed by dispelling self-doubt associated with job role transitions, resisting undesirable influences, persisting with change, and building confidence in being competent in the new role. Role breadth self-efficacy is one of the conditions that facilitates the ability to change job roles. |
Individual learning | Learning guarantee | Having clear learning goals and plans, choosing the right learning style, and ensuring that time and energy are spent on learning are all essential to ensuring that individual learning is effective. In the learning process, new knowledge and skills can only be effectively absorbed if one is truly embedded in the learning situation, participates in real-life projects, conducts in-depth seminars, maintains an active learning mindset and perseverance, expands one’s thinking about learning, accepts new things, and reflects on one’s understanding. Individual learning is a prerequisite for developing the ability to change work roles. |
Level of participation | ||
Knowledge absorption |
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Li, Z.; Li, Y. The Structural Dimensions of “Double-Qualified” Teachers’ Work Role Transition Competence and Its Generation Mechanism. Sustainability 2022, 14, 8237. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14148237
Li Z, Li Y. The Structural Dimensions of “Double-Qualified” Teachers’ Work Role Transition Competence and Its Generation Mechanism. Sustainability. 2022; 14(14):8237. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14148237
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Zhenghai, and Yanping Li. 2022. "The Structural Dimensions of “Double-Qualified” Teachers’ Work Role Transition Competence and Its Generation Mechanism" Sustainability 14, no. 14: 8237. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14148237
APA StyleLi, Z., & Li, Y. (2022). The Structural Dimensions of “Double-Qualified” Teachers’ Work Role Transition Competence and Its Generation Mechanism. Sustainability, 14(14), 8237. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14148237