Teachers' Professional Competence and Working Conditions in Swedish Schools. Relationships with Student Achievement
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Date
2025-04-30
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Abstract
The Swedish teaching profession has undergone extensive reforms over the past four decades, leading to
variations in teacher competence and specializations. More recently, the teaching profession has also faced
challenges related to declining status, as well as difficulties in recruitment and retention. These disparities
contribute to inequalities in teacher distribution and a widening achievement gap, yet there is limited
understanding of how variations in teacher competence affects student achievement.
This thesis investigates how teachers’ professional competence and working conditions relate to student
achievement in Swedish middle schools (grades 4-6). It analyses data from TIMSS and PIRLS, combined
with Swedish register data, to explore relationships between teacher competence and student outcomes in
mathematics, reading, and overall performance in grade 6. The thesis consists of an integrative essay and
three empirical studies, each focusing on different aspects of teachers’ professional competence and
working conditions.
The essay evaluates various models and frameworks of teacher competence while also summarizing
research in this field. Study I investigates how formal education, subject-specific specialization, and teaching
experience relate to grade 4 mathematics achievement, finding that a latent construct of formal teacher
competence is strongly related to student performance. Study II examines teacher qualifications, reading
specializations, reading comprehension activities, and cognitive activation strategies in grade 4, exploring
their short- and long-term associations with student achievement. Study III examines how teachers’
working conditions and school climate relate to their job satisfaction and student achievement. Findings
highlight the importance of formal education in improving students’ mathematics performance and subject-specific expertise in enhancing outcomes in both mathematics and Swedish. A curvilinear relationship
emerges between reading comprehension activities in grade 4 and student achievement in PIRLS and
Swedish by grade 6. Additionally, cognitive activation strategies appear to have a positive cross-subject
relationship. The findings also underscore the importance of a positive school climate for both teacher
well-being and student success.
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Keywords
teacher competence, teacher quality, teaching quality, working conditions, student achievement