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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Sell, Andrea J. – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2023
This paper provides a review of the contextual factors that are associated with levels of morale and job satisfaction in academic institutions. It argues that universities can purposefully create workplace environments that support employee well-being by measuring, attending to, and addressing levels of collegiality; designing policies that…
Descriptors: Morale, College Faculty, School Personnel, Job Satisfaction
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Asfahani, Ahmed M. – International Journal of Higher Education, 2021
Family and work are fundamental aspects of life, and an individual must find a balance between both. Prioritizing one over the other can cause distress in one's life. Every individual plays an important role in their work and non-work/personal life with the aim of fulfilling their needs, but it's not always easy to find a balance, which may cause…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Family Work Relationship, Role Conflict, Working Hours
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Westoby, Christopher; Dyson, Judith; Cowdell, Fiona; Buescher, Tim – Gender and Education, 2021
Gender inequality prevails in academia; there is currently no review on the barriers and facilitators to success for female academics in UK Higher Education. We conducted a systematic search identifying 32 papers addressing this issue. Narrative review revealed six themes: networks (prohibiting the inclusion of women), home-work balance (where…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gender Bias, Higher Education, College Faculty
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Brown, Theresa J.; Clark, Christine – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2017
Background: Work family balance (WFB) is an individual's perception of the fit between work and family roles. Among employed parents of typically developing children WFB has been demonstrated to impact work functioning and physical and psychological health. Emerging from this mature field of research are examinations of WFB among parents of…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Literature Reviews, Disabilities, Employed Parents
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Edge, Karen – School Leadership & Management, 2014
Most schools currently employ three generations of teachers and leaders: Baby Boomers (1946-65), Generation X (1966-80) and Generation Y (1981-2003). However, the implications for school leaders of multi-generational schools remain relatively unexplored. This paper examines the empirical multi-disciplinary generations at work evidence to identify…
Descriptors: Generational Differences, Family Work Relationship, Power Structure, Cooperation
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Schmidt, Diane E.; Duenas, Gilbert – Public Personnel Management, 2002
Examines quality of life issues for families and the policies and options available to employers to create a family- and worker-friendly organization. Discusses ways in which employers have improved productivity by providing dependent care and flexible working conditions. (Contains 28 references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Practices, Family Work Relationship
Shore, Rima – 1998
Increasing numbers of employed parents of young children, increasing work-family conflict experienced by these parents, and the importance of early experience for children's brain development combine to suggest opportunities for business organizations to improve their competitiveness and compassion. This report draws upon data from the National…
Descriptors: Brain, Case Studies, Employed Parents, Employee Assistance Programs
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Hobson, Charles J.; Delunas, Linda; Kesic, Dawn – Journal of Employment Counseling, 2001
Considers how failure to balance excessive work and life/family demands can lead to negative consequences for both individuals and organizations, including higher stress levels, increased absenteeism, and lower productivity. Discusses results of a survey on stressful life events that offers an explanation of why work/life balance programs are so…
Descriptors: Employee Absenteeism, Employer Employee Relationship, Family Work Relationship, Job Satisfaction
Sachs, Sharon – 1994
More than 58 percent of all women working in the U.S. labor force, many of them sole supports of their families, and 67 percent of women with children under age 18 are working. Therefore, more flexible work options are being made to allow a balance of work and family. Increasingly available options include work at home, compressed workweeks,…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Parents, Employed Women, Employment Practices
Entin, Alan D. – 1993
Studies have shown that work-related stressors are compounded by the stressors that employees bring to the workplace. Although interdisciplinary interest in the work-family relationship has increased during the past 2 decades, a conceptual understanding of how work affects the family or the reciprocal relationship between family and work has yet…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Burnout, Counseling Techniques, Family Counseling
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Hodkinson, Phil; Hodkinson, Heather; Evans, Karen; Kersh, Natasha; Fuller, Alison; Unwin, Lorna; Senker, Peter – Studies in the Education of Adults, 2004
In this paper we address a perceived gap in the workplace learning literature, for there is very little writing which successfully integrates the issues of individual learners into predominantly social theories of learning. The paper draws upon data from four linked research projects to address this problem. Following an analysis of the…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Learning Theories, Social Theories, Workplace Literacy
Palmer, Scott – 1997
During the 20th century there has been a widespread pattern of language shift among the indigenous communities of the United States and Canada. The language-of-work hypothesis posits that if the national language is used as the language of work for virtually all jobs in a minority-language community, the national language will, within a few…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Languages, Attitude Change, Economic Factors
Rahmanou, Hedieh – 2001
This research brief presents some main findings from a study of employer-based support systems in the United States to help families meet their caregiving responsibilities, and focuses on the failure of existing policies to support caregiving responsibilities of low-income parents and women. The brief also presents policy alternatives to help…
Descriptors: Adult Children, Caregivers, Child Rearing, Children
Johnson, Karen L.; Lero, Donna S.; Rooney, Jennifer A. – 2001
The issue of integrating work and family responsibilities has been the subject of federal, provincial, and territorial policy planning and several task forces in Canada. This report plus executive summary, designed to inform the dialogue and stimulate continued discussion, brings together a wide variety of work-life facts and figures related to…
Descriptors: Children, Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Employed Parents
Hoyal, Digby – 1994
This paper addresses the shortage of physicians providing medical services to rural communities in Queensland, Australia. Queensland is the fastest growing Australian state, but it has the lowest ratio of total doctors to population. Data indicate there may be twice as many patients per rural doctor compared with the city, which represents a…
Descriptors: Community Attitudes, Community Influence, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Work Relationship
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