Australian research exposes mental health crisis among teachers

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Australian research exposes mental health crisis among teachers

Two significant studies this year have revealed a mounting crisis within the education sector in Australia, with teachers facing severe mental health challenges.

The research shows the toll being taken by crushing workloads and prolonged exposure to student and family trauma. The studies paint a grim picture of a profession under immense strain, with dire implications for teacher retention and student outcomes.

Thousands of South Australian teachers on strike, November 9, 2023. [Photo: Facebook/Australian Education Union (SA)]

The first study, entitled Teachers’ workload, turnover intentions, and mental health, was conducted by a research team from the University of New South Wales (UNSW) and the Black Dog Institute, a renowned mental health research institution. Surveying nearly 5,000 Australian primary and secondary teachers in 2022–24, it is one of the most comprehensive investigations into the mental health of educators to date.

The study found that teachers were experiencing symptoms of depression, anxiety and stress at levels three times the national average. For instance, the average score for depressive symptoms on the Depression, Anxiety & Stress Scale (DASS) among teachers was 15.40, compared to a population norm of 5.02. Anxiety symptoms were at 12.12 versus 3.36 and stress at 21.80 versus 8.10.

The research said 90.7 percent of teachers reported moderate-to-extremely severe levels of stress. Furthermore, nearly 70 percent of participants reported moderate-to-extremely severe symptoms of both depression (70.5 percent) and anxiety (68.9 percent).

A central cause was unmanageable workload. The research made a distinction between the “core” work of teaching—planning and delivering lessons—and the ballooning “non-core” tasks that now dominate teachers’ time. These included administrative duties, excessive data collection and tracking, and compliance with various policies and accountability frameworks.

Some 68.8 percent of teachers surveyed rated their workload as “largely unmanageable” or “completely unmanageable.” The study’s analysis established a clear chain reaction: a higher, unmanageable workload was positively correlated with greater levels of depressive symptoms, which, in turn, were strongly correlated with higher intentions to leave the profession.

Lead researcher Dr. Helena Granziera noted that teachers were not overwhelmed by teaching itself, but by the mounting load of non-core tasks, driving burnout and disillusionment. The consequences were severe: clinical-level depression and anxiety that diminished quality of life, impaired daily functioning and, in the schools, reduced performance, increased absenteeism, and worsened teacher shortages. This also undermined classroom quality and student outcomes, creating a ripple effect that threatens an entire generation.

The second study, published in May, The Silent Cost: Impact and Management of Secondary Trauma in Educators, revealed another serious threat to teacher mental health: secondary traumatic stress (STS). Led by Dr. Adam Fraser in collaboration with Deakin University, this research surveyed almost 2,300 educators and collected over 1,000 detailed trauma stories.

The study said educators had effectively become the “social workers of society,” yet the education system was dramatically under-prepared and under-resourced to support educators. STS occurs from repeated exposure to the traumatic experiences of others. For teachers, this involves consistently hearing students’ distressing personal stories, witnessing their struggles, and carrying the emotional burden of their challenges.

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