Abstract:
The main purpose of this study was to determine the relationship among professional
attitude of teachers, their job satisfaction and job performance and their comparison
between regular and contractual teachers in Pakistan. The study was delimited to the
contractual (SSEs) and regular (SSTs) teachers and head teachers of government
secondary schools of Punjab province, the most populated province of Pakistan. It was
carrying mixed-methods research approach i.e. data were qualitative and quantitative. For
the qualitative data, an interview protocol was designed for the executives i.e. DPIs,
Addl. DPIs, EDOs and DEOs. Some open-ended questions were also included in the
questionnaire to collect the qualitative data of the study. The quantitative data were
collected from a sample of 332 regular teachers, 313 contractual teachers and 645 head
teachers of secondary schools through developing three questionnaires on five point
rating scales; two for the teachers (to measure their professional attitude and job
satisfaction) and one for the head teachers (to rate teachers job performance). The
instruments were duly validated through expert opinions and the reliability was
established through pilot study on a small sample in two districts Kasur and Lahore. The
reliability of the final questionnaires was established at .784, .780 and .944 for
professional attitude, job satisfaction and job performance respectively. The quantitative
data of the two questionnaires were analyzed on the basis of mean, standard deviation,
Independent Samples t-test (Levene’s test and 2-tailed t-test) and Pearson Correlation.
Qualitative data were analyzed by converting raw data into frequencies and placing in
identical categories of responses. Results were presented in tables and with frequencies
and the opinion of respondents was calculated in percentage to draw the inferences.
The key findings of the study revealed that professional attitude of teachers had
positive relationship with job satisfaction and job performance; job satisfaction of
teachers had positive relationship with their job performance. Professional attitude in
combination with Job Satisfaction appeared to have more significant positive relationship
with job performance. Regular SSTs teachers had better professional attitude, job
satisfaction and job performance level than contractual SSEs teachers; female teachers
had relatively better professional attitude, job satisfaction and job performance level than
male teachers and urban teachers had more positive professional attitude, job satisfaction
and job performance level than rural teachers. Majority of the teachers liked their
children or relatives to join teaching profession; although they showed dissatisfaction
with the existing pay scale and financial package for teachers and suggested for
recruitment of teachers on regular basis. Most of the head teachers disagreed that teachers
should be recruited on contract basis. They thought that contractual teachers do not
perform well due to their low salary package and unsecured job. The educational
managers i.e. EDOs, DEOs, DPI and Addl. DPI were of the view that regular (SSTs),
female and urban teachers have more positive attitude towards teaching profession, better
job satisfaction and job performance than their contractual (SSEs), male and rural
teachers counterparts.