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Showing all 11 results Save | Export
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Nkosinathi Goodman Dlamini; Nothando Delight Dlamini – Discover Education, 2024
According to research done in South Africa, there is an increasing worry about the wellness of academic staff members, with many of them reporting high levels of stress and burnout. Heavy workloads, a lack of resources, and an unsatisfactory work-life balance are just a few factors that studies have identified as leading to poor well-being. Low…
Descriptors: Well Being, Barriers, College Faculty, Universities
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Winning, Colin – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2020
ResDiary is a Glasgow-based software company providing software to the hospitality industry. Over a 9-year period the company has grown from 5 to 100 employees and increased annual turnover 20x. In January 2019, the CEO retired from the business and two new CEOs were appointed. This account of practice investigates what organisational changes were…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Computer Software, Hospitality Occupations, Corporations
Robinson, Janell R. – ProQuest LLC, 2016
Information technology (IT) outsourcing poses a potential job loss threat to IT professionals, which can decrease job security, job satisfaction, and organizational commitment. The problem that this study addressed was the perceived role of IT outsourcing in the job stress, job dissatisfaction, and turnover intention of IT professionals. The…
Descriptors: Outsourcing, Anxiety, Job Satisfaction, Information Technology
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Klehe, Ute-Christine; Zikic, Jelena; Van Vianen, Annelies E. M.; De Pater, Irene E. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2011
During organizational restructuring and downsizing, employees often worry about being redundant, actually are redundant, and/or feel unsatisfied with their jobs. Employees, in turn, often react with poor loyalty to and high voluntary exit from the organization. The current study addresses this process from a careers' perspective, showing that…
Descriptors: Organizational Change, Employer Employee Relationship, Employee Attitudes, Anxiety
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Michael, Orly; Court, Deborah; Petal, Pnina – International Journal of Educational Management, 2009
Purpose: This research aims to examine the impact of job stress on the organizational commitment of a random, representative sample of coordinators in the Israeli educational mentoring organization PMP. Organizational commitment, including affective, continuance and normative commitment, refers to worker relations in the organization, and how…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Job Satisfaction, Burnout, Anxiety
Winefield, Tony; Boyd, Carolyn; Saebel, Judith; Pignato, Silvia – Australian Universities' Review, 2008
In 2003/4, 13 Australian universities took part in a follow-up survey of occupational stress following an earlier one conducted in 2000. More than 6000 staff participated at each time, of whom 969 (stayers) participated at both times. This paper presents the cross-sectional data obtained on both occasions as well as the longitudinal data provided…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Dropouts, Psychology, Job Security
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Murrell, Audrey J.; Sprinkle, Jodi – Computers in Human Behavior, 1993
A survey of 29 employees at a real estate office revealed that one-third still felt incompetent with computers despite generally positive attitudes toward them. A correlation appears to exist between frustration with computers and job satisfaction, although negative attitudes toward computers and job performance appear unrelated to organizational…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Correlation, Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction
Deloney, Julia R.; Schroeder, David J. – 1982
Research has shown that stress and anxiety are significant correlates of perceived health, but the effects of job difficulty and job satisfaction are unclear. To study the effect of shift work, job satisfaction, and difficulty and anxiety on reported health, 6,281 electronics technicians, engineers, and support staff completed surveys of…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Difficulty Level, Employee Attitudes, Employees
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Gavin, James F.; Axelrod, Wendy L. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1977
Measures of job stress and strain were obtained from 95 management level employees in an underground mine. In addition, 13 potential moderators of stress-strain relations were assessed. Findings indicated that such stresses had moderate to high relationships with the psychological strains of anxiety. (Author)
Descriptors: Administrators, Anxiety, Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction
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Zickar, Michael J.; Gibby, Robert E.; Jenny, Tim – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2004
This article examines the job attitudes of people who hold more than one job. Satisfaction, stress, and organizational (continuance and affective) commitment were assessed for both primary and secondary jobs for 83 full-time workers who held two jobs concurrently. Consistency between job constructs across jobs was negligible, except for…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Employee Attitudes, Work Attitudes, Anxiety
Matthews, Doris B.; Casteel, Jim Frank – 1987
Stress in various occupations is of interest to managers, counselors, and personnel workers. A study was undertaken to examine, through the use of self-report scales, stress-related characteristics of workers in occupations which require many and varied human interactions. Subjects were 244 full-time employees in six professions: health services,…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Banking, Burnout, Education