Home / Volume 9, Issue 2 / Teacher Wellbeing, Burnout, and Resilience Training in Teacher… Open access · CC BY-NC 4.0
Research Paper Volume 9 Issue 2 1914 - 1942 April 15, 2026

Teacher Wellbeing, Burnout, and Resilience Training in Teacher Education

Lead author · Corresponding
Dr. Neha Goyal
Assistant Professor at Amity Institute of Behavioural and Allied Sciences, Amity University, Noida, U.P., India
View PDF Full text DOIhttps://doij.org/10.10000/IJLMH.1111710
Abstract

Teacher wellbeing and burnout represent critical challenges in education systems worldwide, with 25-40% of early career teachers leaving the profession within their first five years. This systematic review synthesizes evidence from 30 highly relevant studies examining interventions designed to enhance teacher wellbeing, prevent burnout, and build resilience within teacher education programs. The review encompasses diverse intervention approaches including mindfulness-based programs, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) workshops, emotional intelligence training, and comprehensive resilience frameworks such as Building Resilience in Teacher Education (BRiTE). Findings demonstrate that structured wellbeing interventions embedded within pre-service teacher education can significantly reduce stress, anxiety, and burnout symptoms while enhancing resilience, self-efficacy, and professional commitment. Mindfulness-based interventions consistently show medium to large effect sizes across multiple wellbeing outcomes, while CBT-based approaches effectively improve emotional regulation and stress management. The evidence strongly supports the integration of systematic wellbeing training into teacher education curricula as a preventive strategy to address the teacher retention crisis and promote sustainable teaching careers.

Type
Research Paper
Information
International Journal of Law Management and Humanities, Volume 9, Issue 2, Page 1914 - 1942
DOI: https://doij.org/10.10000/IJLMH.1111710
Creative Commons
CC BY-NC 4.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits remixing, adapting, and building upon the work for non-commercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © IJLMH 2026
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this manuscript are those of the author(s) alone and do not reflect the views, policies, or position of the Journal.

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