The Satisfaction Level of Science and Mathematics Teachers with Their School Principals as Resident Supervisors in Enhancing Students’ Learning

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.70232/jrmste.v2i2.28

Keywords:

School principals, Resident Supervisor, Science and Mathematics Teachers, Teachers’ Satisfaction Level

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine the satisfaction levels of Jordanian science and mathematics teachers regarding the school principal’s role as a resident supervisor. The target population consisted of all Jordanian science and mathematics teachers, from which a sample of 212 male and female teachers was drawn. Data were obtained through a researcher-designed questionnaire, the validity and reliability of which were established prior to its administration. The instrument was disseminated electronically to participants using the snowball sampling method. Findings revealed that the overall satisfaction of Jordanian science and mathematics teachers with the principal’s role as a resident supervisor fell within the high category. Moreover, no significant differences were identified in teachers’ satisfaction levels based on gender, years of teaching experience, type of school (public or private), or area of specialization (science or mathematics). Findings concluded that the role of the school principal as resident supervisor has become a necessity rather than just an option. Accordingly, the study reached several recommendations: maintaining the promotion of the culture of resident supervision, strengthening the factors that increase the level of teachers’ satisfaction with their principals, and achieving fairness, regardless of the gender of the teacher and school principal, specialization, type of school (government or private sector), experience, academic degree, and other variables strengthening the integrated relationship between school principals, teachers, students, and the local community. This study aims to investigate the relationship of teachers with educational supervision, parents, and their relationship with each other. Researchers can also conduct studies to investigate the impact of the role of the school principal as a mentor in improving the performance of teachers and students.

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Author Biographies

  • Ali Khaled Bawaneh, Department of Mathematics, Science & ICT Education, Bahrain Teachers College, University of Bahrain, Bahrain

    Ali Khaled Bawaneh is a faculty member in the department of Math and Science and ICT at Bahrain Teachers College. His research interests include teaching principles and methods; curriculum development; teacher training; misconceptions in science; teaching, and learning; academic professional development; and educational technology. Dr. Bawaneh has achieved the status of Fellow (FHEA) based on the UK Standards Framework for teaching and learning. Dr. Bawaneh is Certified as a Senior Trainer in educational reform and professional development. Qualifications: Ph.D., Science Education University Science Malaysia 2011, Master Science Education Hashemite University 2004, High Diploma in Teaching Science Yarmouk University 2002 Bachelor of Physics Yarmouk University 1998. He can be contacted at email: abawaneh@uob.edu.bh

  • Yazan M. Alghazo, Department of Mathematics, Science & ICT Education, Bahrain Teachers College, University of Bahrain, Bahrain

    Dr. Yazan M. Algha is a faculty member in the department of Math and Science and ICT at Bahrain Teachers College. His research interests include math teaching methods; curriculum development; and educational technology.  Qualifications: Ph.D., Math Education Southern Illinois University 2014, Master math Education Southern Illinois University 2011, and Bachelor of computer engineering Mutah University 2008.

  • Belal S. Rabab'h, Department of Mathematics, Science & ICT Education, Bahrain Teachers College, University of Bahrain, Bahrain

    Experienced Assistant Professor with a demonstrated history of working in the higher education industry. Skilled in Research, Statistic Analyses. Strong education professional with a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) focused in Education/ mathematics from University Utara Malaysia. Assistant Professor at University of Bahrain DAC chair , Math, Science and ICT department,  Bahrain Teachers College, University of Bahrain – Bahrain

  • Abdulghani Al-Hattami, Department of Educational Studies, Bahrain Teachers College, University of Bahrain, Bahrain

    Abdulghani Al-Hattami is the Head of the Initial Teacher Education Department and an assistant professor in the Education Studies Department at Bahrain Teachers College of the University of Bahrain. Dr. Al-Hattami is a Senior Fellow of the UK Advance Higher Education Academy (SFHEA) (2022) and a Fellow of UK The Higher Education Academy (FHEA) (2018). His qualifications: Ph.D., Educational Psychology (Assessment, Statistics, and Research Methods), University of Pittsburgh, 2012; M.Ed., Research Methodology, Loyola University Chicago, 2006; M.Ed., English Language Teaching (Applied Linguistics), Hodeidah University, 2000; B.A., English Language Teaching, Hodeidah University, 1998. Dr. Al-Hattami’s areas of expertise and research interests are the application of statistical analyses on educational and social problems; measurement and psychometrics, including instrument development and validation, computer adaptive testing, and the applications to item response theory (IRT), and English language teaching (ELT). He can be contacted at email: aalhattami@uob.edu.bh.

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Published

2025-10-01

How to Cite

Bawaneh, A. K., Alghazo, Y. M., Rabab'h, B. S., & Al-Hattami, A. (2025). The Satisfaction Level of Science and Mathematics Teachers with Their School Principals as Resident Supervisors in Enhancing Students’ Learning. Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science, and Technology Education, 2(2), 73–84. https://doi.org/10.70232/jrmste.v2i2.28

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