dc.description.abstract | Despite the unfavourable status of the teaching profession in Serbia, the number of studies
investigating teachers’ motivation for teaching has remained relatively low. The goal of this
study was to explore the motivations for a teaching profession and to determine if there were
differences in motivation depending on the teaching program and disciplines preservice
teachers studied. Participants were 433 preservice teachers from four Serbian state
universities (Mage= 22.6, SD = 2.32). There were 25.2% participants from teacher training
faculty (prospective class teachers), 30.3% from Science and Engineering faculties and
44.5% from Social science and Humanities faculties (prospective subject teachers). Relying
on the FIT-Choice model, 42-item Factors influencing choice of a teaching career scale was
applied, which consists of 13 motivation constructs/ reasons for choosing a teaching career.
The highest rated reasons for choosing a teaching career were: Intrinsic value (M = 6.14, SD
= 1.08, range 1–7), Shape future of children (M = 5.72, SD = 1.34), Perceived teaching
abilities (M = 5.43, SD = 1.16) and Work with children (M = 5.41, SD = 1.56), while
choosing teaching as a Fallback career was the lowest ranked factor (M = 1.78, SD = 1.16).
ANOVA with the type of faculty being independent variable pointed to significant
differences on: Time for family (F(2, 430) = 8.148, p < .001, ηp2=.037), Enhance social
equity (F(2, 430) = 6.706, p < .001, ηp2 = .030), Social influences (F(2, 430) = 4.502, p <
.005, ηp2=.021), Work with children (F(2, 430) = 10.226, p < .001, ηp2=.045), and Shape
future of children (F(2, 430) = 4.250, p < .005, ηp2=.019). Scheffe’s post hoc test revealed
that the prospective Social science and Humanities teachers scored lower on the factor Time
for family than both prospective class and Science and Engineering teachers. Prospective
class teachers scored higher on Enhance social equity and Work with children than
prospective subject teachers. Prospective class teachers are more strongly motivated by the
factor Shape future of children than the prospective Science and Engineering teachers, and
more motivated by Social influences (those of the family and friends) than the Social science
and Humanities teachers. Results are discussed in the light of broader socioeconomic
situation, societal values and the preservice education characteristics | sr |