Continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty members

Engineering education is complex and demanding. The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a sudden shift from face-to-face to virtual teaching modalities, highlighting the need for robust university continuing education programs. This caused professors to invest more hours in attending training, which adde...

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Main Authors: Josué Omar Nava-Manzo, Jesus Alfonso Beltran-Sanchez, Irma Marcela González-Treviño, Angeles Dominguez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Education
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2024.1457642/full
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author Josué Omar Nava-Manzo
Jesus Alfonso Beltran-Sanchez
Irma Marcela González-Treviño
Angeles Dominguez
Angeles Dominguez
author_facet Josué Omar Nava-Manzo
Jesus Alfonso Beltran-Sanchez
Irma Marcela González-Treviño
Angeles Dominguez
Angeles Dominguez
author_sort Josué Omar Nava-Manzo
collection DOAJ
description Engineering education is complex and demanding. The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a sudden shift from face-to-face to virtual teaching modalities, highlighting the need for robust university continuing education programs. This caused professors to invest more hours in attending training, which added to the stressors of the profession and those caused by the global situation and could add to the appearance of mental disorders such as anxiety, depression, stress, or burnout. This research aims to explore the relationship between continuing education programs and the prevalence of mental disorders such as anxiety, depression, stress, and burnout among faculty members. Utilizing a quantitative, non-experimental, cross-sectional, correlational design, the study involved 307 professors from the School of Engineering and Sciences at a private university in northeastern Mexico. Tools included a burnout scale, a stress scale, an anxiety scale, and a self-report depression scale. Findings suggest that faculty members dedicate an average of 20 h per semester to training programs. Although no significant gender differences in training hours were observed, perceived intensity differed with educational level and contract type, suggesting that continuing education programs impact faculty mental health variably. The study concludes a statistically significant relationship exists between stress, anxiety, burnout, and continuing education programs; but the magnitudes are too low to make generalizations. However, it was found that excessive time commitment is a factor that is detrimental to mental health; therefore, it is essential that training programs, in addition to meeting institutional and operational needs, also consider controls that promote the well-being and mental health of teachers. In this sense, continuing education programs contribute to professional growth and can also be a crucial component in the prevention and mitigation of mood disorders among teachers.
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spelling doaj-art-a61c94f68c5e4534b367a14760ec83e12025-01-03T12:37:00ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Education2504-284X2025-01-01910.3389/feduc.2024.14576421457642Continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty membersJosué Omar Nava-Manzo0Jesus Alfonso Beltran-Sanchez1Irma Marcela González-Treviño2Angeles Dominguez3Angeles Dominguez4Tecnologico de Monterrey, Monterrey, MexicoTecnologico de Monterrey, Monterrey, MexicoTecnologico de Monterrey, Monterrey, MexicoTecnologico de Monterrey, Monterrey, MexicoUniversidad Andres Bello, Santiago, ChileEngineering education is complex and demanding. The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a sudden shift from face-to-face to virtual teaching modalities, highlighting the need for robust university continuing education programs. This caused professors to invest more hours in attending training, which added to the stressors of the profession and those caused by the global situation and could add to the appearance of mental disorders such as anxiety, depression, stress, or burnout. This research aims to explore the relationship between continuing education programs and the prevalence of mental disorders such as anxiety, depression, stress, and burnout among faculty members. Utilizing a quantitative, non-experimental, cross-sectional, correlational design, the study involved 307 professors from the School of Engineering and Sciences at a private university in northeastern Mexico. Tools included a burnout scale, a stress scale, an anxiety scale, and a self-report depression scale. Findings suggest that faculty members dedicate an average of 20 h per semester to training programs. Although no significant gender differences in training hours were observed, perceived intensity differed with educational level and contract type, suggesting that continuing education programs impact faculty mental health variably. The study concludes a statistically significant relationship exists between stress, anxiety, burnout, and continuing education programs; but the magnitudes are too low to make generalizations. However, it was found that excessive time commitment is a factor that is detrimental to mental health; therefore, it is essential that training programs, in addition to meeting institutional and operational needs, also consider controls that promote the well-being and mental health of teachers. In this sense, continuing education programs contribute to professional growth and can also be a crucial component in the prevention and mitigation of mood disorders among teachers.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2024.1457642/fullcontinuing educationanxietydepressionstressburnoutfaculty development
spellingShingle Josué Omar Nava-Manzo
Jesus Alfonso Beltran-Sanchez
Irma Marcela González-Treviño
Angeles Dominguez
Angeles Dominguez
Continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty members
Frontiers in Education
continuing education
anxiety
depression
stress
burnout
faculty development
title Continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty members
title_full Continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty members
title_fullStr Continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty members
title_full_unstemmed Continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty members
title_short Continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty members
title_sort continuing education program and its relationship with the mental health of engineering faculty members
topic continuing education
anxiety
depression
stress
burnout
faculty development
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2024.1457642/full
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