Vol.:(0123456789) 1 3
Early Childhood Education Journal
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10643-020-01124-7
Neglected Elements of a High‑Quality Early Childhood Workforce:
Whole Teacher Well‑Being and Working Conditions
Kyong‑Ah Kwon
1
· Timothy G. Ford
1
· Alicia L. Salvatore
2
· Ken Randall
3
· Lieny Jeon
4
· Adrien Malek‑Lasater
1
·
Natalie Ellis
5
· Mia S. Kile
5
· Diane M. Horm
6
· Sun Geun Kim
1
· Minkyung Han
1
Accepted: 12 October 2020
© Springer Nature B.V. 2020
Abstract
The majority of teachers in the early care and education (ECE) workforce face disparities in physical and psychological well-
being as well as working conditions. This study examined the working conditions and physical, psychological, and profes-
sional well-being of early childhood teachers and compared the results by the child age group they care for and by teachers’
level of educational attainment. Two hundred sixty-two early childhood teachers completed a brief health assessment and a
questionnaire on demographic information, well-being, and working conditions. A subsample of 40 teachers were observed
for the quality of care they provided to the children. A substantial number of the teachers in the study reported physical and
psychological challenges and suboptimal working conditions for well-being, a largely neglected workforce issue, for this
working population. Several signifcant diferences in teachers’ well-being and working conditions were found by the child
age group for which they care and by teachers’ level of educational attainment. In particular, teachers with higher educational
levels had greater resources for work and provided higher quality of care, however, they also reported poorer physical and
professional well-being than teachers with less education. Overall fndings indicate a need for policies and programs that
will improve working conditions and health outcomes for early childhood teachers and the children in their care. These fnd-
ings suggest that ECE teachers may have unique needs across the age groups with whom they work and teacher educational
levels, regarding work-related resources and conditions.
Keywords Whole teacher well-being · Physical and psychological well-being · Early childhood workforce · Working
conditions · Classroom quality
In recent decades, there has been increased attention to the
relationship between working conditions and the health and
well-being of workers (Landsbergis 2010; Lipscomb et al.
2006; National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
2020; Stiehl et al. 2019). In particular, researchers have
raised concerns about disparities in working conditions and
workers’ health and well-being, particularly for low-wage
and racial and ethnic minority workers (Landsbergis 2010;
Lipscomb et al. 2006; Stiehl et al. 2019). Overall, studies
have found substantial variability in worker outcomes, with
poorer working conditions associated with higher risks
related to health and well-being (Gu et al. 2014; Stiehl et al.
2019).
The majority of teachers in the early care and education
(ECE) workforce, as a marginalized group, face these same
disparities (Linnan et al. 2017; Otten et al. 2019; Whitaker
et al. 2013). In the U.S., the more than two million ECE
teachers, who care for ten million children between the ages
of 0 to 5, have long been known as the lowest paid work-
force—even among the teachers who have college degrees
(U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics 2018; Whitebook et al.
2018; Whitebook et al. 2014). According to a recent report
(U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics 2018), the median wage for
* Kyong-Ah Kwon
kasdream@gmail.com
1
The University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, 4502 E. 41st Street
(Suite 4W120), Tulsa, OK 74135, USA
2
Value Institute, ChristianaCare, Newark, DE, USA
3
The University of Oklahoma Health Science Center,
Oklahoma City, OH, USA
4
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA
5
The University of Oklahoma, Norman, OH, USA
6
Early Childhood Education Institute, The University
of Oklahoma-Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA