From heartbeat to data - using wearable fitness trackers as an affordable approach to assess teachers’ stress
Chronological data
Date of first publication2025-12-29
Date of publication in PubData 2026-01-15
Language of the resource
English
Editor
Case provider
Other contributors
Abstract
Introduction Past research on physiological indicators of teacher stress often had to rely on expensive and obtrusive assessment methods. Modern fitness trackers represent a non-invasive and convenient alternative. Methods This study investigated the use of wrist-worn fitness trackers to assess teachers’ heart rate (HR) as an indicator of stress during teaching. In a laboratory study, we used a Fitbit ® fitness tracker to assess teachers’ HR before, during, and after a potentially stressful micro-teaching unit. Results Our results demonstrated that the fitness tracker was useful for mapping teachers’ stress, with the data showing how teachers’ HR increased before, peaked during, and progressively decreased after the micro-teaching unit. Moreover, we related the fitness tracker data to retrospective teacher self-reports and found that teachers’ subjective stress appraisals and their teaching experience explained only small amounts of variance in HR data. Discussion We discuss the potential of fitness trackers as an affordable and ubiquitous assessment tool for research on teacher stress in the classroom and provide advice for practical implementation.
Keywords
Teacher Stress; Fitness Tracker; Heart rate; Classroom Disruption; Wearable Technology; Physiological Stress Measurement
