Interpersonal Conflict among Teachers in Community Schools: A Narrative Inquiry
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Kathmandu University School of Education
Abstract
Interpersonal conflict among teachers is an important aspect in teacher’s professional
development in context of Nepal. The study explores stories of teachers and their
perception, understanding of interpersonal conflict in their day-to-day work life. This
research highlighted that interpersonal conflict in the workplace affects the quality of
work of teachers in community schools.
This study used narrative inquiry to investigate interpersonal conflict among
teachers in community schools with observation and in-depth interviews. I conducted
field work in two community schools with five teachers of Kathmandu. Metropolitan
City. I believed in relational realism by following constructivism as epistemology and
interpretivism as research paradigm. To present the stories in line with the research
question, I grounded my study on Kim's framework for narrative analysis, specifically
Mishler's typology of "imposing a told story on the telling."
I used Dahrendorf’s authority-relation conflict theory and social identity
theory as the theoretical framework to analyze workplace conflict. Authority-relation
theory explained how formal and informal power structures cause structural friction,
while social identity theory highlighted how diverse group memberships exacerbate
these tensions. Together, they comprehensively explain how interpersonal conflict
emerges from the intersection of institutional authority and personal identity
The study revealed that persistent relational and structural factors such as
seniority based informal authority, or new teacher- old teacher relationship ingrained
in schools’ culture influenced interpersonal conflict among teachers. Conflicts
emerged from perceived challenges to dignity, authority, informal power dynamics,
gendered expectations, resistance to change, and differences in teaching approaches.
When conflict arose, teachers respond through self-doubt, avoidance, withdrawal, and
silence showing that the response mechanisms included detachment, passive
compliance, adaptability, conflict, and negotiation.
The stories showed that interpersonal conflict in community schools impacted
collaboration and the well-being of teachers. Policymakers and education leaders,
who aim to enhance school environments as workplaces, can utilize this study as
evidence. It also adds empirical and theoretical knowledge to educational research in
Nepal.
