Democratic student participation is widely endorsed as a pillar of civic education and inclusive schooling. However, its enactment remains complex and often contested in everyday pedagogical practice. This study investigates how teachers’ concerns about democratic student-participation are internally structured and shaped by individual beliefs and contextual conditions. Drawing on a cross-sectional survey of Austrian teachers ( n = 311), the study employs exploratory factor analysis and multiple regression modeling to identify key dimensions of concern and their predictors. Results reveal a three-dimensional structure of teacher concerns: Loss of Control and Structure, Low Student Engagement, and Organizational Overload. Contrary to the assumption that concerns reflect ideological resistance, findings suggest that they are significantly shaped by institutional and relational factors, such as socio-economic student background, teacher age, and the extent to which participatory practices are embedded in core teaching processes and formal structures. Notably, teachers’ abstract beliefs about democracy, whether civic, institutional, or social justice-oriented, did not significantly predict concern levels. These results underscore the need to reconceptualize teacher concerns not as obstacles but as context-sensitive indicators of the institutional conditions under which democratic education can thrive. Implications for professional development and policy reform are discussed.
Rita Phillips (Tue,) studied this question.