Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists

Research (e.g. by Zafeiriou & Gulliford, 2020) indicates that teaching staff supporting children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) might present with issues related to their well-being within the context of educational psychology casework. The present study therefore uniquel...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Akyeampong-Spencer, Afia
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/66152/
_version_ 1848800302792179712
author Akyeampong-Spencer, Afia
author_facet Akyeampong-Spencer, Afia
author_sort Akyeampong-Spencer, Afia
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Research (e.g. by Zafeiriou & Gulliford, 2020) indicates that teaching staff supporting children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) might present with issues related to their well-being within the context of educational psychology casework. The present study therefore uniquely explored the practices, perceptions and experiences of educational psychologists (EPs) in relation to teacher well-being (TWB) in the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people (CYP) with SEND. Semi-structured interviews were used with six EPs to explore their practices and experiences, drawing additionally on vignette methodology to explore their beliefs in this area. Thematic analysis, used on interview data, suggests that EPs encounter TWB issues within casework across all areas of SEND, linking not only to the case demands, but to stressors within teachers’ personal lives and within the profession. The data indicates that TWB needs can interrupt EPs’ ability to problem-solve, impacting on their experience of the casework outcomes and trajectory. The data also tentatively suggests that support for TWB might be a secondary outcome of educational psychology casework. Indeed, some EPs reflected their use of strategies to support both teachers’ professional and affective well-being (as defined by van Horn et al., 2004) within casework. They also highlighted some constraints and professional duties which impede on their responses to TWB needs in casework, including those of service delivery and time. Helpfully, EPs reflected some of their responses which may enable TWB needs to be met within their casework involvement despite such constraints. Vignette methodology indicated considerable overlap between EPs’ beliefs and their accounts of their own responses to TWB needs in casework. The findings suggest that EPs should consider teachers’ potential fragility within casework and consider using the casework context as a vehicle for TWB support to find a way forward for the CYP at the heart of this fundamental aspect of EPs’ practice.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:49:24Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-66152
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:49:24Z
publishDate 2021
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-661522023-01-25T13:30:24Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/66152/ Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists Akyeampong-Spencer, Afia Research (e.g. by Zafeiriou & Gulliford, 2020) indicates that teaching staff supporting children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) might present with issues related to their well-being within the context of educational psychology casework. The present study therefore uniquely explored the practices, perceptions and experiences of educational psychologists (EPs) in relation to teacher well-being (TWB) in the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people (CYP) with SEND. Semi-structured interviews were used with six EPs to explore their practices and experiences, drawing additionally on vignette methodology to explore their beliefs in this area. Thematic analysis, used on interview data, suggests that EPs encounter TWB issues within casework across all areas of SEND, linking not only to the case demands, but to stressors within teachers’ personal lives and within the profession. The data indicates that TWB needs can interrupt EPs’ ability to problem-solve, impacting on their experience of the casework outcomes and trajectory. The data also tentatively suggests that support for TWB might be a secondary outcome of educational psychology casework. Indeed, some EPs reflected their use of strategies to support both teachers’ professional and affective well-being (as defined by van Horn et al., 2004) within casework. They also highlighted some constraints and professional duties which impede on their responses to TWB needs in casework, including those of service delivery and time. Helpfully, EPs reflected some of their responses which may enable TWB needs to be met within their casework involvement despite such constraints. Vignette methodology indicated considerable overlap between EPs’ beliefs and their accounts of their own responses to TWB needs in casework. The findings suggest that EPs should consider teachers’ potential fragility within casework and consider using the casework context as a vehicle for TWB support to find a way forward for the CYP at the heart of this fundamental aspect of EPs’ practice. 2021-12-08 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/66152/1/AA-S%20Thesis%202021%20with%20amendments%20%28August%202021%29.pdf Akyeampong-Spencer, Afia (2021) Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists. DAppEdPsy thesis, University of Nottingham. SEND Special Educational Needs and Disabilities educational psychologists teacher wellbeing
spellingShingle SEND
Special Educational Needs and Disabilities
educational psychologists
teacher wellbeing
Akyeampong-Spencer, Afia
Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists
title Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists
title_full Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists
title_fullStr Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists
title_full_unstemmed Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists
title_short Teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with SEND: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists
title_sort teacher wellbeing within the context of educational psychology casework for children and young people with send: an exploration of the experiences, perceptions and practices of educational psychologists
topic SEND
Special Educational Needs and Disabilities
educational psychologists
teacher wellbeing
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/66152/