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Schulte, Marthann – Journal of Continuing Higher Education, 2016
Working at a distance brings several benefits, often offset by several detriments. One aspect of working at a distance is the difficulty in sharing successes and promoting accolades. These successes may be personal, team, program, or institutional. But, as a distance worker it can seem daunting or even futile when attempting to "toot your own…
Descriptors: Success, Awards, Conferences (Gatherings), Professional Development
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Beadle, Hazel – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2015
Using qualitative data gathered through 144 questionnaires completed online by education sector personnel, this paper examines the relevance of a definition of e-working to the educational context. It identifies that the definition, which draws on and extends existing knowledge and identifies e-working to be a way of being a worker as well as a…
Descriptors: Teleworking, Computer Use, Questionnaires, School Personnel
Depryck, Koen – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2014
To a large extent, developments in the workplace and in (especially formal) education still take place independently from each other, regardless of a strong (market driven) demand to bring both closer to each other. The divide is especially visible when looking at developments towards e-working (telecommuting, …) on the one hand and developments…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Teleworking, Educational Innovation, Education Work Relationship
Broman, Noel C. – ProQuest LLC, 2014
Telecommuting has become a strategic benefit for modern companies to lower costs and to improve productivity and efficiency. People in industries such as information technology consider telecommuting to be acceptable work practice. Telecommuting provides many benefits for some organizations. In this study, the researcher examined whether there are…
Descriptors: Teleworking, Administrator Attitudes, Cost Effectiveness, Productivity
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Grogan-Johnson, Sue; Schmidt, Anna Marie; Schenker, Jason; Alvares, Robin; Rowan, Lynne E.; Taylor, Jacquelyn – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2013
Telepractice has the potential to provide greater access to speech-language intervention services for children with communication impairments. Substantiation of this delivery model is necessary for telepractice to become an accepted alternative delivery model. This study investigated the progress made by school-age children with speech sound…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Intervention, Speech Therapy, Children
Heisey, Allyson G. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Since the mid-1970s, teleworking has been recognized as being beneficial to organizations, individuals, and communities. In the 1980s and 1990s, advancements in technology made teleworking an attractive option for many workers, including those with disabilities. Teleworking has gained popularity and has been heralded as a method of accommodation…
Descriptors: Teleworking, Disabilities, Family Work Relationship, Quality of Working Life
Slaughter, Sandra Lorraine Hawks – ProQuest LLC, 2013
This qualitative descriptive case study, "Knowledge Worker Perceptions of Telework in the New York Metropolitan Area," was conducted to explore the perceptions of knowledge workers who commute to a physical workplace in the New York Metropolitan area (NYMA). In-depth interviews were conducted with fourteen NYMA commuters who are…
Descriptors: Teleworking, Policy, Knowledge Economy, Qualitative Research
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Hynes, Michael – Research-publishing.net, 2013
The use of technology is pervasive in contemporary society, transforming lives and work environments. The internet and the availability of portable personal communication devices have resulted in immense societal change. Frequently held views of the relationship between individuals and technology are dominated by a production-centric perspective,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teleworking, Sustainability, Holistic Approach
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Phillips, Jack; Phillips, Patti; Robinson, Rachel – Performance Improvement Quarterly, 2013
With the growing suburban population, many employees in metro areas are facing long commutes to and from the workplace. According to the 2011 Texas Transportation Institute's Urban Mobility Report, the average commuter experiences 34 hours of delay per year and spends an extra $713 on fuel (see…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Teleworking, Insurance, Program Effectiveness
Jones, Kenneth E., Jr. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Since 1975, the advance of home-based or remote work has been predicted and encouraged (Nilles). Remote work entails the ability of workers to function as productively from distant locations as those workers in face-to-face office environments: e.g. secondary offices, co-workplace offices, mobile workstations, and home. This study will look at the…
Descriptors: Management Systems, Workstations, Work Environment, Surveys
Claybon, Tina S. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
The interest in working from home in contrast to going to an office continues to be a growing phenomenon. This research examined personal characteristics of telecommuters and non-telecommuters including age, gender, years of working for the organization, and job satisfaction in the quality control and quality assurance arena. This study aimed to…
Descriptors: Teleworking, Quality Assurance, Quality Control, Individual Characteristics
Rose, Laurence Michael – ProQuest LLC, 2013
The primary focus of this research was to explore through the use of a grounded theory methodology if the human perceptions of trust, isolation, and presence affected the virtual workers ability to accept deep organizational change. The study found that the virtual workers in the sample defined their acceptance of deep organizational change by…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Organizational Change, Productivity, Self Efficacy
Kuyatt, Alan E. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The growing power of mobile computing, with its constantly available wireless link to information, creates an opportunity to use innovative ways to work from any location. This technological capability allows companies to remove constraints of physical proximity so that people and enterprises can work together at a distance. Mobile computing is…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Access to Information, Computer Mediated Communication
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Schieman, Scott; Young, Marisa – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Using data from a 2007 U.S. survey of workers, this article examines the implications of schedule control for work-family role blurring and work-family conflict. Four main findings indicate that (a) schedule control is associated with more frequent working at home and work-family multitasking activities; (b) the positive association between…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Conflict, Role, Working Hours
Galusha, Repps J. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The Internet has provided more organizations the opportunity to adopt telecommuting as a means to recruit and retain employees, boost productivity, and trim facility costs. This study expands on the work of a previous study by Hoang, Nickerson, Beckman, and Eng, in 2008 which found that private organizations, due to perceptions of organizational…
Descriptors: Teleworking, Private Sector, Organizational Culture, Statistical Analysis
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