Abstract
Many studies have linked global distress including higher psychological symptom severity and high levels of stress with low levels of well-being among teachers, indicating a need to identify and empirically evaluate protective factors. Mentalizing—the capacity to understand behavior in terms of intentional mental states—may be a candidate protective factor to mediate this association, enhancing well-being in the face of high levels of global distress. The present study examines whether the capacity to mentalize can buffer subjectively experienced stress and psychological symptom severity in a sample of teachers. 215 teachers completed questionnaires measuring self-rated experiences of stress, psychological symptoms, mentalizing capacities and well-being in a cross-sectional design. Structural equation modeling was used to test mediation effects. Our findings show that mentalizing was positively associated with well-being. In addition, mentalizing counteracted the negative influence of stress and psychological symptom severity. However, a structural equation model assessing the mediating effect of global distress on well-being via mentalizing was not significant. Therefore, the data indicate that teachers’ capacity to mentalize, regardless of psychological symptom load and subjective experience of stress, has a positive impact on their well-being. The study highlights the protective function of mentalizing and forms a framework for psychological interventions to increase teachers’ well-being.
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Introduction
According to the transactional stress model (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984), stress is the multifaceted result of an interaction between two systems—the individual and the environment—and is conceptualized as “the relationship between a person and the environment that is appraised by the person as taxing or exceeding his or her resources and endangering his or her well-being” (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984, p. 21). Therefore, stress experiences represent a precursor of reduced well-being. Well-being in contrast, is described as “the state of positive functioning at its fullest range—mentally, physically and socially” (Su, Tay, & Diener, 2014, p. 256). It includes several core contributors such as (1) enriching and supportive relationships, (2) life satisfaction and the presence of positive feelings, (3) engagement and interest in daily activities, (4) feelings of autonomy and control, (5) purpose in life, (6) a sense of accomplishment, and (7) optimism (e.g. Diener, 1984; Ryan & Deci, 2000; Ryff, 1995; Scheier & Carver, 1987).
High levels of stress, increased psychological symptom severity and low well-being have been shown to be present in teachers in a range of empirical studies. Hasselhorn and Nübling (2004) investigated personal experiences of stress in more than 30,000 German employees across different fields of work. The authors found that teachers experienced particularly high stress levels compared to other employees. Similarly, when comparing more than 50,000 teachers with 35,000 employees working in other professions, Nübling et al. (2012) found that the teachers perceived their work as emotionally more difficult and reported less well-being. Additionally, teachers experienced stress-related psychological symptoms such as depressive thoughts more frequently, and consequently their self-rated well-being was poorer. These observations were further confirmed by findings of a study of 20,000 employees by Lohmann-Haislah (2012): relative to employees working in other disciplines, teachers experienced a higher symptom load. Specifically, they reported more tiredness and weariness, were more irritable, anxious, emotionally drained, and had higher rates of sleep difficulties.
Three consequences of high levels of global distress in teachers, encompassing psychological symptom severity and high experiences of stress, have been identified. First, high levels of global distress in teachers are associated with increased sick leave, resulting in considerable additional costs (e.g. Aktionsrat Bildung, 2014). Second, a high amount of global distress affects work performance, leading to poorer performance of teachers during lessons (e.g. Klusmann, Kunter, Trautwein, & Baumert, 2006; Klusmann & Richter, 2014; Klusmann, Richter, & Lüdtke, 2016; McLean & McDonald Connor, 2015; Shen et al., 2015). Third, the experience of global distress leads to higher subjective suffering and adversely affects well-being in teachers in a crucial way, at work (Rothland, 2013a; Nübling et al., 2012) but also in general (Meng & D’Arcy, 2015). Therefore, there is a need to identify protective factors that could help teachers cope with high levels of global distress.
Rothland (2013b) suggested various contextual risk factors inherent to the teaching profession which may explain high symptom load and stress levels in teachers. This includes having a split workplace (school and at home) and poorly regulated working hours, extensive pedagogical challenges, obligatory work with potentially uncooperative students and/or parents, or a lack of opportunities for promotion. Further research identified classroom disruption, disciplinary problems, unmotivated or behaviourally challenging students, and interactions with colleagues, school administration, and parents as additional stressors (e.g. Chang, 2009; Hakanen, Bakker, & Schaufeli, 2006; Nübling, Wirtz, Neuner, & Krause, 2008; Tsouloupas, Carson, Matthews, Grawitch, & Barber, 2010). These factors accumulate and affect distress experiences as well as well-being in several different and independent ways (Klusmann & Waschke, 2018).
Nevertheless, Hillert, Koch, and Lehr (2013) argued that these inherent contextual do not necessarily lead to the experience of heightened levels of global distress. For example, multilevel modelling analyses in a large cohort of teachers showed that contextual factors in the school/classroom setting are not the only influences on emotional exhaustion (Klusmann, Kunter, Trautwein, Lüdtke, & Baumert, 2008). The authors concluded that a large proportion of the variance in teachers’ emotional exhaustion can be explained by several individual factors, of which contextual factors are only one. In line with this, several authors (e.g. Döring-Seipel & Dauber, 2013; Lehr, Schmitz, & Hillert, 2008; Schaarschmidt, Kieschke, & Fischer, 1999) point out that healthy and stressed teachers seem to differ less with regard to objective and environmental occupational characteristics. Instead, the question arises of how they cope with the challenging factors that influence their well-being. In this context, potentially protective capacities that can be learned and improved upon via psychosocial interventions or professional training are of particular interest (Klusmann & Waschke, 2018). This represents the rationale behind this study.
Mentalizing
The mentalizing concept integrates theoretical contributions from various disciplines such as (relational) psychoanalysis, social cognition, attachment theory, emotional awareness and theory of mind (Luyten, Campbell, Allison, & Fonagy, 2020). Mentalizing is defined as the capacity to perceive and interpret one’s own and others’ behaviors in terms of intentionally motivated mental states, such as feelings, wishes, desires, thoughts, and beliefs (Fonagy & Allison, 2014; Fonagy, Gergely, Jurist, & Target, 2002). Mentalizing can be conceptualized as a multifaceted umbrella concept (Choi-Kain & Gunderson, 2008) with a wide range of intrapsychic processes, encompassing second-order processes such as self-monitoring (cognitive awareness of the self), mindfulness (emotional awareness of the self), empathy (awareness of emotional states in other people) and theory of mind (understanding other people’s beliefs or perspectives). While good mentalizing allows for the adaptive integration of these processes into a coherent understanding of the self and others, difficulties in mentalizing are characterized by a poor use or integration of mental state information (Luyten et al., 2020). Critically, the process of mentalizing allows behavior to become predictable and to be perceived as meaningful, since it can be viewed as underpinned by mental states (Fonagy et al., 2002). Mentalizing is seen, like language acquisition, as a developmental achievement that is accompanied by an increasing awareness of the importance of mental states for both interpersonal and intrapsychic processes (Fonagy & Allison, 2014).
A series of research studies, particularly in the clinical realm, have highlighted the importance of mentalizing in psychopathology (see Katznelson, 2014; Luyten et al., 2020). Impaired mentalizing has been identified as a hallmark feature of psychological illnesses such as borderline personality disorder (e.g. Németh et al., 2018), antisocial personality disorder (e.g. Newbury-Helps, Feigenbaum, & Fonagy, 2017), and depressive disorders (e.g. Fischer-Kern et al., 2013). These and other findings have led to the development of specific psychotherapeutic strategies to improve impaired mentalizing. Evidence of the effectiveness of these strategies comes from randomized controlled trials assessing mentalization-based treatment (MBT; Bateman & Fonagy, 2004) in individuals with borderline personality disorder, which showed that this therapy was superior in improving mentalizing, and subsequently symptom severity, compared to conventional therapies (e.g. Bateman & Fonagy, 1999, 2008, 2009; Fischer-Kern et al., 2015; Jørgensen et al., 2013; Levy et al., 2006; Rossouw & Fonagy, 2012). As a result of therapy, stress-related symptoms also reduce (De Meulemeester, Vansteelandt, Luyten, & Lowyck, 2018). Summing up, evidence thus suggests that impaired mentalizing, which is characteristic of various psychological illnesses, can be improved through psychotherapeutic intervention, leading to reduced psychological symptoms.
Mentalizing as a Protective Capacity
Building on the clinical relevance, a current shift towards focusing on mentalizing as a mediating, health-promoting capacity in non-clinical populations has been observed (e.g. Bateman, Campbell, Luyten, & Fonagy, 2018; Fonagy, Luyten, Allison, & Campbell, 2017; Luyten et al., 2020; Schwarzer, 2019). Most pertinent in this context is the idea that pre-emptive or early interventions facilitating mentalizing capacity can protect an individual from the impact of distressing factors (Brugnera, Zarbo, Compare, et al., 2020), enabling a more resilient adaptation to life stressors (Fonagy et al., 2017). This occurs through the mentalizing-mediated development of an integrated view of the self, which subsequently allows a more adaptive processing of stress-related affective arousal (e.g. Ballespi et al., 2019; Nolte et al., 2013). Fonagy et al. (2017) emphasize that holding a mental representation of potentially stressful events involving others, the meaning of their actions, the emotional impact of these on the self, and the subsequently resulting behaviour requires activating a series of intrapsychic processes that connect the individual to their social context and can buffer the impact of socially caused adversity.
In line with this, a number of studies have recently shown that good mentalizing may be a protective factor for well-being. A prospective longitudinal study of non-clinical adolescents showed that mentalizing predicts well-being 8 years later (Borelli et al., 2019). Moreover, Ballespi et al. (2019) found that increased mentalizing capacity was associated with a decreased frequency of somatic complaints. A mediation analysis by Chiesa and Fonagy (2014) revealed that mentalizing mediated and partially explained the direct relationship between adverse childhood experiences and psychopathology by reducing the impact of early maltreatment. Furthermore, when analysing the mentalizing ability of 500 trainee and qualified pedagogical staff, Schwarzer (2019) found that the presence of stress negatively affected subjective ratings of well-being, whereas mentalizing capacity had an indirect and positive effect on health ratings.
Objective
Considering the protective function of mentalizing capacity as well as the high levels of distress reported in teachers, the mentalizing approach provides a framework that could help teachers cope with daily stressors and psychological symptoms, thereby affecting well-being in a positive way. This is of particular interest because empirical data show that the promotion of mentalizing using mentalization-based interventions in clinical (e.g. De Meulemeester et al., 2018; Levy et al., 2006) and non-clinical samples (e.g. Adkins, Luyten, & Fonagy, 2018; Valle et al., 2016; Welstead et al., 2018) is possible. Therefore, further evidence testing the mediating, health-promoting function of mentalizing in teachers is required. The current study aims to assess this relationship. Figure 1 shows the hypothesized mediation model, suggesting a buffering effect of mentalizing capacity when processing global distress. With reference to the summarized research above, the present study examines the following hypotheses:
(1) There will be a negative correlation between distress parameters and teachers’ well-being, and a positive correlation between teachers’ well-being and mentalizing.
(2) Distress parameters will predict teachers’ well-being in a negative way, whereas the capacity to mentalize will have a positive impact.
(3) The effect of global distress on teachers’ well-being will be mediated by mentalizing.
Methods
Sample and Procedure
Two-hundred and fifteen teachers (140 female) with a mean age of 42.4 years (SD = 10.78) participated in the study. There were 84 (54 female) special education teachers, 65 (51 female) primary school teachers, 7 (2 female) high school (German: Gymnasium) teachers, 18 (7 female) secondary school teachers, and 36 (26 female) teachers working in other settings. Five participants did not report demographic information. There were significant age differences among the subgroups of teachers (F = 3.96, p = 0.004). The oldest group were the teachers in other educational settings (mean age = 46.9, SD = 10.73) and the youngest group comprised special education teachers (mean age = 39.42, SD = 11.16). The entire sample had a mean of 14.12 years of work experience (SD = 9.88, range: 1–46 years). There was a significant difference in years of work experience among the subgroups of teachers (F = 3.07, p = 0.02). Teachers in other settings had the longest experience, with a mean 17.42 (SD = 11.12) years, whereas high school teachers had the shortest experience, with a mean of 11.71 (SD = 7.68) years. Ten participants reported a psychiatric diagnosis. There were no significant differences in the rate of psychiatric diagnosis among the subgroups of teachers (χ2 = 8.40, p = 0.080).
The data for this cross-sectional study were collected in the state of Baden-Württemberg in Germany. Participating teachers were recruited through personal connections to the school headteachers. Once a headteacher agreed, anonymized questionnaires were sent to the school and distributed among the teaching staff. Completed questionnaires were returned by post. Participation was voluntary and took around 10 min. Participants could withdraw and have their data destroyed at any point. All participants provided written informed consent. In order to increase interest in the study, the anonymity of the data was prioritized, and researchers did not record the name of the school where the participant worked. Instead, participants were simply asked to report the type of school at which they worked.
Measures
Mentalizing
The study assessed mentalizing as an individual’s willingness and ability to interpret behaviour as a consequence of mental states (i.e., to take a mentalizing stance) The short form of the German version of the Attribution Complexity Scale (ACS) (Flechter, Danilovics, Fernandez, Peterson, & Reeder, 1986) was used to assess participants’ mentalizing capacity. The ACS has 7 items (e.g., “I don’t usually put up with other people’s behaviour just like that. Instead I usually think about the inner motivations for their behaviour.”). The items are scored on a 7-point Likert scale from 1 (I strongly disagree) to 7 (I strongly agree). High scores indicate strong mentalizing. The internal consistency of this scale was good (α = 0.85). The scores were normally distributed (Kolomogorov–Smirnov p = 0.651).
Well-Being
The Brief Inventory of Thriving (BIT) (Su et al., 2014), German version, was used to assess well-being. The BIT is a 10-item self-report shortened version of the Comprehensive Inventory of Thriving (CIT) that captures well-being in a multidimensional way, creating subscales focused on relationships, engagement, skills, sense of purpose, optimism, and subjective well-being (Su et al., 2014). The BIT has been deemed a reliable, valid, and efficient screening tool (Hausler et al., 2017). The 10 items (e.g. “I am optimistic about my future”) are scored on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (I disagree completely) to 5 (I agree completely). A high score represents better well-being. The internal consistency of this scale was good (α = 0.83). The scores were normally distributed (Kolomogorov–Smirnov p = 0.16).
Distress
In order to enhance the validity of the results, two instruments were used to assess distress in its multifaceted constitution. Psychological symptomatology was assessed with the Symptom-Checklist-90 (Derogatis, 1994)-R (SCL). While the original questionnaire encompasses 90 items, the current study used the short version. It consists of 27 items, which are answered on a 5-point Likert scale from 0 (not at all) to 4 (extremely). There are six subscales (depressive symptoms, dysthymic symptoms, physiological symptoms, agoraphobic symptoms, social phobia, and mistrust) which are summed into one global severity index. Higher scores represent higher symptom loads. The short version is a reliable and valid instrument (Hardt, Egle, Kappis, Hessel, & Brähler, 2004) with good internal consistency (α = 0.89) in the current study. The scores were not normally distributed (Kolomogorov–Smirnov p < 0.001). Moreover, the screening version of the Trier Inventory for Chronic Stress (TICS) (Schulz, Schlotz, & Becker, 2004) was used to measure subjective experience of stress. The TICS consists of 12 self-report items answered on a 5-point Likert scale from 0 (never) to 4 (very often). A high score reflects greater experience of stress. The TICS is a reliable and valid measure and has been shown to be very useful for large samples. It had a very good internal consistency (α = 0.91) in the current study. The data were normally distributed (Kolomogorov–Smirnov p = 0.051).
Demographics
As demographics age, gender, school type and years of work experience were assessed and included in all further analyses.
Data Analysis
Only 0.3% of the data were missing. The expectation-maximization algorithm (Tabachnick & Fidell, 2012) was used to impute missing values. The dataset contained two multivariate outliers, which were identified using the Mahalanobis distance and were eliminated due to a likelihood of occurrence of p < 0.001 (Tabachnick & Fidell, 2012). Pearson’s correlations were used to measure the associations between mentalizing, well-being, and distress’ parameters. Three multiple linear regression analyses entering demographic information (model 1), experienced stress and psychological symptomatology (model 2) and mentalizing (model 3) were used to assess the predictive strength of age, sex, school type, years of work experience, presence of a psychiatric diagnosis, mentalizing, experience of stress, and psychological symptoms on the outcome of well-being. Residuals were analysed using a scatter plot and independence of residuals was tested using the Durbin–Watson statistic (Tabachnick & Fidell, 2012). Multicollinearity was tested using the tolerance (< 0.01) and variance inflation factor (< 10) criteria. In order to test for mediation, structural equation modelling was employed, using a maximum likelihood estimator, as suggested by Weiber and Mühlhaus (2014). To evaluate the model, the following indices of fit were used following Hu and Bentler (1999): (1) the χ2 statistic, (2) the root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) with its 90% confidence interval (CI) and (3) the comparative fit index (CFI) with a non-significant χ2 statistic, RMSEA ≤0.06 and CFI ≥ 0.95 as excellent fit and a non-significant χ2 statistic, RMSEA ≤0.08 and CFI ≥ 0.90 as acceptable fit. Furthermore, owing to the large sample size (> 200) a significant χ2 statistic was expected. Mediation effects were further examined using the bootstrap CI method with 2000 bootstrap samples, and 95% CIs were analyzed. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to first create three latent variables representing global distress, mentalizing capacity and well-being. A general factor of global distress was created, using the TICS (Schulz et al., 2004) and the subscales of the SCL (Hardt et al., 2004), revealing excellent fit (χ2(12, n = 215) = 19.39, p = 0.080; RMSEA = 0.075 with 90% CI [0.024, 0.142]; CFI = 0.994). Furthermore, mentalizing capacity was derived from all items of the ACS (Flechter et al., 1986), again revealing excellent fit (χ2(9, n = 215) = 12.08, p = 0.209; RMSEA = 0.040 with 90% CI [0.000, 0.092]; CFI = 0.994). Finally, well-being was calculated from all items of the BIT (Su et al., 2014). and showed good fit (χ2(32, n = 215) = 41.67, p = 0.118; RMSEA = 0.038 with 90% CI [0.000, 0.067]; CFI = 0.984). In the next step, mediation effects were tested using structural equation modelling with “global distress” as the exogenous variable, “mentalizing” as mediator and “well-being” as the dependent variable. Age, gender, school type and years of work experience were included as covariates in all further analyses.
Results
Table 1 shows the descriptive variables and scores across all scales for all participants, as well as correlations between scales. Significant negative correlations were found between teachers’ psychological symptomatology and their experience of stress and well-being (r = −0.41, p ≤ 0.001; r = −0.32, p ≤ 0.001, respectively). A significant positive correlation was found between teachers’ mentalizing capacity and well-being (r = 0.28, p ≤ 0.001). A weak positive correlation was found between stress and mentalizing (r = 0.19, p ≤ 0.01). No significant correlations were found between psychological symptomatology and mentalizing. Age and years of work experience were not correlated with stress, well-being, or mentalizing.
Table 2 shows the results of the multiple linear regression analyses predicting well-being. All assumptions were met (i.e., normally distributed and independent residuals, homoscedasticity). There was no evidence of multicollinearity. The final regression model (model 3) was significant (medium to large effect) and revealed that 27% of variance in well-being was explained by the predictor variables (adjusted r2 = 0.27, F = 9.40, p ≤ 0.001). Psychological symptomatology (β = −0.32, p ≤ 0.001) and stress (β = −0.20, p ≤ 0.050) had a significant negative effect on well-being. Mentalizing (β = 0.31, p ≤ 0.001) had a significant positive effect on well-being. Sex, age, school type, years of work experience, native language, and the presence of a psychiatric diagnosis were not significant predictors of well-being. In order to evaluate a potential moderation effect, we carried out another regression model with all predictors and an interaction term including mentalizing and a latent variable consisting of stress and symptomatology. This, however, led to a poorer fit (adjusted r2 = 0.26, F = 8.48, p ≤ 0.001). The interaction term revealed no significance (β = −0.04, p = 0.490).
Figure 2 shows the structural equation model testing the mediating effect of mentalizing. Covariates were excluded because they were not associated with well-being and including these led to a poorer model fit. The model that used “global distress”, “mentalizing”, and “well-being” as latent variables fit the data well (χ2(239, n = 215) = 350.19, p < 0.001; RMSEA = 0.047 with 90% CI [0.036, 0.057]; CFI = 0.941). Based on 2000 bootstrap samples, a significant direct effect of global distress on well-being (β = −0.55 with 95% CI [−0.38, −0.69], p = 0.001) was found. Furthermore, mentalizing capacity had a significantly positive effect on well-being (β = 0.38 with 95% CI [0.19, 0.53], p = 0.002). The direct effect of global distress on mentalizing was not significant (β = 0.08 with 95% CI [−0.10, 0.24], p = 0.403). Therefore, the structural equation model showed that the mediating effect reached no significance (β = 0.03 with 95% CI [−0.03, 0.12], p = 0.375). In summary, both significant effects accounted for a total contribution of 41.9% of the variance in well-being (see Fig. 2).
Discussion
The current study investigated the link between well-being, global distress, and mentalizing capacity in a sample of 215 teachers. Owing the high levels of global distress in teachers, protective factors that could help teachers cope with challenges and improve their well-being need to be identified (Klusmann & Waschke, 2018). Mentalizing—the capacity to understand behavior in terms of intentional mental states—appears to be a promising candidate factor that could possibly mediate this association, enhancing well-being even in the presence of high levels of global distress. Thus, psychosocial interventions to enhance mentalizing capacity may be suitable for increasing teachers’ well-being.
The current findings support our first hypothesis that well-being correlates negatively with psychological symptoms and a subjective rating of stress experiences, but positively with mentalizing capacity. These results are consistent with evidence from other clinical (Ballespi et al., 2019) and non-clinical samples (Nolte et al., 2013; Schwarzer, 2019), overall suggesting close associations between mentalizing and well-being. Surprisingly, subjective ratings of stress, but not psychological symptom severity were associated with mentalizing capacity in the studied sample. According to the literature (e.g. Fonagy et al., 2002; Luyten et al., 2020; Németh et al., 2018; Newbury-Helps et al., 2017), a negative association between psychological symptoms and impairments in mentalizing capacity is to be expected, however our study failed to replicate this association. This may be explained at least partially by a lower average symptom burden in the studied sample than what is found in clinical samples (e.g. Fischer-Kern et al., 2013), indicating the need for replication of our results in mixed samples.
The multivariate linear regression analysing the impact of individual demographic factors, distress’ parameters and mentalizing on well-being showed that teachers’ well-being is not influenced by age, years of work experience, school type, native language, or the presence of psychiatric diagnoses. However, both distress parameters—increased psychological symptomatology and heightened subjective experience of stress—negatively predicted teachers’ well-being. On the other hand, increased mentalizing positively affected well-being and therefore confirms hypothesis 2, suggesting that mentalizing capacity may be a protective factor. These results align with clinical (Ballespi et al., 2019; Chiesa & Fonagy, 2014) and non-clinical (Borelli et al., 2019; Schwarzer, 2019) studies, indicating the protective and health-promoting influence of mentalizing. Together, these findings suggest good mentalizing ability allows negative experiences to be metabolized and processed more adaptively (Ballespi et al., 2019; Fonagy et al., 2017), leading to an overall reduced impact of negative experiences on the individual.
Due to the potentially health-promoting role of mentalizing, confirmed by the regression results, the final hypothesis of the current study suggested that a direct impact of total stress on well-being was mediated by mentalizing capacity. Contrary to this hypothesis and much of the existing literature (e.g. Brugnera et al., 2020; Chiesa & Fonagy, 2014; Schwarzer, 2019), the current mediation analysis showed that the indirect mediating effect of global distress on well-being via mentalizing was not significant. Therefore, considering the negative effect of global distress on well-being and the positive effect of mentalizing capacity on well-being, it must be assumed that distress and mentalizing affect teachers’ well-being in this sample in two independent (negative and positive, respectively) ways. Teachers’ mentalizing may thus not be directly associated with the processing of current distress, as our data suggest. Instead, it has an independent health-promoting influence on teachers’ well-being, indicating a protective, but rather passive role of mentalizing in the processing of distress. Consequently, this result differs from theoretical approaches which conceptualize mentalizing capacity as a mediating factor (Fonagy et al., 2017), and is contrary to recent empirical findings (e.g. Brugnera et al., 2020; Chiesa & Fonagy, 2014; Schwarzer, 2019). This surprising result may be at least partially explained by the instruments used in the study, as well as several socio-demographic factors, that were not assessed during data collection (such as supportive relationships), indicating a need to replicate the findings in a larger sample, including both clinical and non-clinical subjects.The current findings support the idea that good mentalizing, that is the capacity to understand one’s own and others’ behaviour in terms of mental states, is beneficial for teachers’ mental health. Teachers often report reduced well-being due to multiple stressors typical of the pedagogical field (Hasselhorn & Nübling, 2004; Lohmann-Haislah, 2012; Nübling et al., 2012). As a consequence, increased experience of distress during work reduces the quality of life in general, which in turn is associated with increased costs due to sick leave, and negative impacts on work performance and the quality of teaching (e.g. Klusmann et al., 2006, 2016). Research investigating potential protective or resilience factors that reduce the impact of distress in teachers is therefore essential (Klusmann & Waschke, 2018). Mentalizing has been shown to be a health-promoting factor (e.g. Ballespi et al., 2019; Borelli et al., 2019; Fonagy et al., 2017; Schwarzer, 2019) that is highly relevant in both clinical and non-clinical contexts. Importantly, mentalizing capacity can be modified and improved by psychotherapeutic intervention (Fischer-Kern et al., 2015; Levy et al., 2006) and through short-term non-clinical supervision (Adkins et al., 2018; Valle et al., 2016; Welstead et al., 2018). With reference to the current study, it can be concluded that teachers’ capacity to mentalize, regardless of global distress, has a positive impact on teachers’ well-being.
Limitations and Suggestions for Future Research
This study extends existing evidence of the protective function of mentalizing to a non-clinical setting. Nevertheless, several limitations should be considered when interpreting these findings. The cross-sectional design confirms several theoretical hypotheses but does not allow causal inferences to be made. Furthermore, the study depends on self-report instruments, the use of which may lead to shared method variance as well as to biases in reporting and conclusions. A prospective or longitudinal study design using alternative methods (e.g., performance testing, physiological testing, interviews) should be conducted to replicate the current findings. The study assessed mentalizing as an individual’s willingness and ability to interpret behaviour as a consequence of mental states (i.e., to take a mentalizing stance) using a self-report instrument. This approach has been criticized by some authors (e.g. Taubner & Sevecke, 2015), and more direct measures of mentalizing exist (e.g., Fonagy, Target, Steele, & Steele, 1998). With regard to the ACS, this instrument reflects the respondent’s attitude toward taking a mentalizing stance rather than the ability to mentalize per se, so that ACS can be seen as an approximation measuring mentalizing. This may also explain why the indirect pathway of the mediation analysis did not reach significance. More specifically, we found no significant relationship between psychological symptomatology and mentalizing, and only a small positive correlation between stress and mentalizing. These findings are surprising, since psychosocial stress is associated with a temporary reduction in mentalizing capacity (Nolte et al., 2013). This observation may further support the notion that the ability to mentalize can be differentiated from the construct of holding a mentalizing stance. The sample size could be considered as a further limitation of the study, and the sample may not have been representative of all types of teachers or all types of schools and institutions. Although the experience of global distress is mostly subjective and should not be influenced by the type of school, factors such as school atmosphere, personal relationships with colleagues or the personal life situation (e.g. supportive relationships), and catchment area could covary with teachers’ well-being. The current analysis did not account for these multiple levels; however, this could be incorporated into a larger, longitudinal analysis.
Practical Implications
The present study investigated the extent to which willingness to mentalize and perceive behaviour based on mental states is associated with well-being in 215 teachers, and whether it is a protective factor in light of global distress. We found that good mentalizing buffered or helped processing of the effects of distress on well-being. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the negative effect of distress and the positive influence of mentalizing on well-being were independent from each other. These findings are important in the context of high levels of distress among teachers. Furthermore, they highlight the protective function of the capacity to mentalize, which can be enhanced in teachers through interventions such as mentalization-based supervision (Adkins et al., 2018; Valle et al., 2016; Welstead et al., 2018) in order to address teachers’ well-being.
Data Availability
Data is available. Please contact the corresponding author.
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Schwarzer, NH., Nolte, T., Fonagy, P. et al. The relationship between global distress, mentalizing and well-being in a German teacher sample. Curr Psychol 42, 1239–1248 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-021-01467-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-021-01467-3