Date of Award

4-15-2025

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Education (EdD)

Department

Educational Leadership

First Advisor

Felice D. Billups, Ed.D.

Committee Members

Felice D. Billups, Ed.D.; Victor Mercurio, Ed.D.; Ed Cabellon, Ed.D.

Keywords

educational accountability policies, teacher well-being, educational equity, paradox of accountability policies

Abstract

This study explores the relationship between U.S. educational accountability policies and teacher well-being. While researchers have established the instrumental role of teachers in shaping student academic achievement and lifetime outcomes (Darling-Hammond, 2000; Hanushek, 2019), many teachers grapple with high levels of stress and burnout (Steiner & Woo, 2021), which negatively impacts teacher well-being (Herman et al., 2018; Turner & Thielking 2019). The era of educational accountability was initiated to improve K-12 education and ensure equity and excellence for all students (Figlio & Loeb, 2011); however, it has coincided with, and may have exacerbated, teacher stress and burnout (Trinidad, 2023). To probe this complex and seemingly paradoxical relationship, a qualitative historical analytical design was employed. Extant documentation from 1983—marking the start of federal accountability policy reform— through 2023 was examined, encompassing all relevant federal accountability policies and seeking to understand their explicit written intentions. Insights from educational historians, policymakers, and teachers further illuminate the gap between policy goals and real-world experiences in schools. Drawing on Deborah Stone’s (2012) policy paradox framework, the analysis unpacks how policy language, goals, and trade-offs shape the lived experiences of educators. Findings reveal that despite shifts in accountability frameworks from the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), and the Race to the Top (RTTT), to the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), core contradictions persist—particularly between equity and efficiency, security and liberty, and support and sanction—leading to unintended consequences for teachers.

Included in

Education Commons

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