Open Access

Teacher Motivation, Educational Resilience, and Community Adaptation in Pastoral and Climate-Vulnerable Contexts: An Integrative Study of Schooling in East Africa and Comparable Underserved Settings

4 Department of Education and Social Development, Kuwait University, Kuwait
4 Department of Education Policy and Community Development, Kuwait University, Kuwait
4 Department of Rural Education and Social Change, Sultan Qaboos University, Oman

Abstract

Background: Educational development in pastoral and climate-vulnerable regions is shaped by a difficult convergence of ecological uncertainty, mobility, land-use change, financial exclusion, weak infrastructure, and uneven policy implementation. In such contexts, schools are not isolated bureaucratic institutions; they are social spaces located within wider systems of livelihood transformation, resettlement, adaptation pressure, and community negotiation. At the same time, the literature on teacher motivation, recognition, remuneration, job satisfaction, enthusiasm, adaptation to flexible learning environments, and policy support shows that teacher commitment strongly influences school climate, instructional quality, retention, and learner engagement. Despite this, the scholarship on pastoral livelihoods and the scholarship on teacher motivation are rarely brought into sustained dialogue.

Objective: This article develops a comprehensive theoretical synthesis of how teacher motivation should be understood in pastoral and climate-affected contexts, especially in East Africa and comparable under-resourced settings. It argues that teacher motivation in such regions is not only a matter of salary or professional morale, but a foundational component of educational resilience, community adaptation, and socially responsive development.

Methods: A text-based integrative review methodology was employed using only the references provided. The literature was organized into interrelated domains: pastoral transition and livelihood change; climate adaptation and shifting social contracts; financial inclusion and rural access constraints; teacher recognition, motivation, and job satisfaction; flexible learning environments and student engagement; and education policy implementation.

Results: The synthesis indicates that pastoral and resettlement regions are marked by mobility, infrastructural insufficiency, ecological stress, and changing livelihood systems that directly affect schooling access and stability (Galvin, 2018; Fratkin, 2014; Greiner, 2016; FAO, 2021). Within such settings, motivated teachers act as institutional anchors. Recognition, remuneration, leadership support, enthusiasm, and adaptive working conditions are strongly associated with teacher commitment, performance, and student engagement (Aranguez, 2024; Balatero & Bauyot, 2024; Dewaele & Li, 2021; Ephrahem et al., 2022; Helena & Sikawa, 2023; Kimani & Mwenda, 2022). The review further suggests that teacher motivation in pastoral regions must be interpreted as both an educational issue and a development issue.

Conclusion: Sustainable educational improvement in pastoral and climate-vulnerable regions requires a framework that links teacher motivation to livelihood conditions, social inclusion, policy implementation, and community adaptation. Schools in such contexts become resilient not merely through infrastructure, but through motivated educators capable of working across uncertainty, mobility, and institutional fragility.

Keywords

References

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