Emotion Management as Key to Mental Health? Teachers’ Emotions and Support Systems
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. Definition of Terms: Emotions
“Emotions consists of neural circuits […], response systems, and a feeling state/process that motivates and organizes cognition and action. Emotion also provides information to the person experiencing it, and may include antecedent cognitive appraisals and ongoing cognition including an interpretation of its feelings state, expressions or social-communicative signals, and may motivate approach or avoidant behavior, exercise control/regulation of response, and be social or relational in nature.”
2.2. Definition of Terms: Emotional Labor and Emotion Regulation
2.3. State of Research: Teachers’ Experience and Management of Emotions
3. Method
3.1. Participants and Procedures
3.2. Data Collection Instrument and Data Collection
3.3. Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Teachers’ Emotions
“I spent quite some time during my teacher training dreaming at night that I was standing naked in front of the class. And I find that very telling, because it really expresses exactly that emotion, the fear of standing naked in front of the class because you’re not competent enough, because you don’t know how to react, because you overreact. I don’t know. And then you’re alone, and they’re many. And if they laugh at you, you’re the fool. That’s a fear, and it’s something you naturally experience.”(GS_42_w, line 250–255)
“I couldn’t deliver a good lesson because of some very hyperactive students. I was so exhausted that I could only yell. In that moment, I was so angry, sad, and above all, desperate, because I couldn’t calm the kids down. Honestly, after that lesson, I questioned my entire career choice. That desperation, simply because you have no idea how to control those troublemakers, is really the worst. I can definitely say that you get angry most often out of desperation, and then you quickly lose control in front of the children.”(GS_36_w, line 133–137)
4.2. Teachers’ Emotion Management
“A situation that comes to mind spontaneously, which is relatively trivial, happened with a first grader. It was the end of the school day, quite early in the school year, and the children were restless. It had been a long, exhausting day, and the student was just busy chewing on his jacket sleeve, chewing it wet, goofing around. I wanted to wrap up the day, the bus was coming, and the bus kids needed to leave on time. I could feel my frustration and stress levels rising. I told him several times, ‘Stop that, clean up your things, put your chair up,’ but he kept goofing around, didn’t clean up, and kept chewing on his jacket. And then (- - -) I was really about to snap, almost yelled at him, but I held myself back and said, ‘You stay after class, I need to talk to you’. Everyone else left and I asked him, ‘What’s going on?’ He didn’t look at me and said ‘Nothing’ and turned away. So, I took his sweatshirt and the wet, chewed sleeve and said, ‘That’s not nothing... what’s this?’ He looked at me and said, ‘Because I’m hungry.’ […] And in that moment, this little first grader was really a master in my eyes, and I sent up a little prayer in that moment, thinking, ‘Thank God I didn’t yell at this child in my tunnel vision.’ So, I asked, ‘What did you eat today?’ and he said, ‘Two small Knoppers’ and showed me the wrapper. Then I asked, ‘What did you have for breakfast?’ He said, ‘Nothing.’ Then he told me that they never have time at home to have breakfast”(GS_w, line 51–67)
4.3. Teachers’ Personal and Institutional Support Systems for Emotion Management and Mental Health Maintenance
5. Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Rübben, R. Emotion Management as Key to Mental Health? Teachers’ Emotions and Support Systems. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 886. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070886
Rübben R. Emotion Management as Key to Mental Health? Teachers’ Emotions and Support Systems. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(7):886. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070886
Chicago/Turabian StyleRübben, Ricarda. 2025. "Emotion Management as Key to Mental Health? Teachers’ Emotions and Support Systems" Education Sciences 15, no. 7: 886. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070886
APA StyleRübben, R. (2025). Emotion Management as Key to Mental Health? Teachers’ Emotions and Support Systems. Education Sciences, 15(7), 886. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070886