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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
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Siqi Zhao; Zhang ShouChen; Wang Hong – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2024
Teacher turnover presents a significant challenge in education. Despite recognizing the importance of examining turnover intention to address this issue, exploring the interplay between multiple job demands and turnover intention is lacking within the framework of the job demands-resources theory. To fill this gap, the present study theoretically…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Family Work Relationship, Foreign Countries, College Faculty
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Saleem, Zohra; Hanif, Ayaz Muhammad; Shenbei, Zhou – SAGE Open, 2022
This study develops an Employee Emotional Engagement Model in the work and family domain using structural equation modeling. The effects of transiting from work to family role are measured via the experience sampling method over 2 weeks from 126 university teachers. Multilevel modeling results indicate that family engagement worsened when…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Family Work Relationship, Work Environment
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Finnestrand, Hanne – Learning Organization, 2023
Purpose: This paper aims to demonstrate how the Nordic model, featuring highly regulated trade union-employer collaboration, has enabled the building of learning organizations through a co-generative learning model involving both practitioners and action researchers. Design/methodology/approach: A literature search on the Nordic sociotechnical…
Descriptors: Organizational Development, Unions, Employers, Cooperation
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Lee, Yunsoo; Eissenstat, SunHee J. – International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance, 2018
The purpose of this study is to longitudinally examine the job demands-resources model of corporate burnout, as well as the effects of burnout on intentions to quit. To achieve this goal, this study adopts a latent-growth model using panel data collected by the Work, Family, and Health Study. The results suggest that psychological job demands and…
Descriptors: Burnout, Models, Intention, Family Work Relationship
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Wong, Shui-wai – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
A new working model -- having multiple careers during the same time period (slash careers) -- is emerging despite the lack of official statistics. A slash worker in Hong Kong was interviewed based on Savickas's Career Construction Interview procedure and three life themes were identified. The life themes are interconnected and provide meaningful…
Descriptors: Career Change, Models, Employee Attitudes, Career Choice
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McCarthy, Dermot; Dragouni, Mina – Studies in Higher Education, 2021
Recent decades have seen the evolution of UK business schools into international mass education providers. This transformation has developed against a background of institutional changes that jeopardise work conditions in academia. As few studies have examined the relationships between organisational, social and psychological aspects of academic…
Descriptors: Business Schools, Educational Change, Mass Instruction, Organizational Change
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Fontinha, Rita; Van Laar, Darren; Easton, Simon – Studies in Higher Education, 2018
Quality of working life has been defined as the part of overall quality of life that is influenced by work. We developed a mediation model where home-work interface, job and career satisfaction, control at work, and working conditions are considered to be positively related to employee commitment and to the absence of stress at work. These two…
Descriptors: Quality of Working Life, Contracts, Tenure, Statistical Analysis
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Fusulier, Bernard; Barbier, Pascal; Dubois-Shaik, Farah – European Educational Research Journal, 2017
Men and women remain in unequal positions in coping with their scientific and academic careers. Several of the mechanisms dissuading or preventing women from pursuing scientific careers have already been described in the literature: women getting stuck with paltry, undervalued tasks, thus manufacturing a "sticky floor"; structuring the…
Descriptors: Science Careers, Gender Differences, Family Work Relationship, College Faculty
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Beham, Barbara; Drobnic, Sonja; Prag, Patrick – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2011
The present study tested an extended version of Voydanoff's "differential salience vs. comparable salience model" in a sample of German service workers. Our findings partially support the model in a different national/cultural context but also yielded some divergent findings with respect to within-domain resources and boundary-spanning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Work Relationship, Work Environment, Service Occupations
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Melin, Marika; Astvik, Wanja; Bernhard-Oettel, Claudia – Quality in Higher Education, 2014
This study investigates the relationship between the work conditions in higher education work settings, the academic staff's strategies for handling excessive workload and impact on well-being and work-life balance. The results show that there is a risk that staff in academic work places will start using compensatory coping strategies to deal with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Teaching Conditions, Faculty Workload
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Huss, Ephrat; Sarid, Orly; Cwikel, Julie – Health & Social Work, 2010
War poses a challenge for social workers, adding exposure to direct risk of personal harm to the general stress of social work practice. Artworks are frequently used in health care settings with people in high distress. This study had three goals: (1) to characterize the stressors of social workers living in a war zone, (2) to teach social workers…
Descriptors: Intervention, Anxiety, Social Work, Art
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Sabat, Satya Narayan; Mishra, Sunita – International Journal of Learning and Change, 2010
Notwithstanding the emancipation and advancements of women all over the world in 21st century, women continue to be under-represented in management positions. The role of women as managers encompassed even those areas of work, which were earlier considered to be strongly man's domain like the police organisation. The objective of the study was to…
Descriptors: Managerial Occupations, Disproportionate Representation, Females, Role
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Jackson, Z. Vance; Wright, Stephen L.; Perrone-McGovern, Kristin M. – Journal of Employment Counseling, 2010
Men are choosing to enter nontraditional careers with greater frequency. In this article, the authors examine nontraditional career choices made by men and review current empirical literature relevant to this topic. Gottfredson's (1981, 1996) theory of circumscription and compromise and Holland's (1997) career choice theory are used as frameworks…
Descriptors: Careers, Nontraditional Occupations, Career Choice, Sex Role
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Gallie, Duncan; Russell, Helen – Social Indicators Research, 2009
This article explores the influence of working conditions on work-family conflict (WFC) among married/cohabiting employees across seven European countries. Using data from the European Social Survey, the paper first investigates the role of working conditions relative to household level characteristics in mediating work-family conflict at the…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Family Life, Family Characteristics, Conflict
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Shapiro, Mary; Ingols, Cynthia; Blake-Beard, Stacy – Journal of Career Development, 2008
Over the past decade, practitioners and scholars have struggled to explain women's career choices. The current language, including "opting out," "on and off ramping," and "mommy track," is not only inadequate but assumes a deviation from an accepted norm. We challenge the relevance of the paradigm against which women are being judged, namely, the…
Descriptors: Females, Career Development, Work Environment, Family Work Relationship
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