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Riley, Shanda R. – ProQuest LLC, 2018
The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of professional advocacy and job stress on burnout in professional school counselors in Texas. One hundred and thirty professional school counselors in Texas participated in the study by completing an online survey in which they answered 8 demographic questions and questions from the Counselor…
Descriptors: Burnout, School Counselors, Online Surveys, Questionnaires
Holmes, David – Independent School, 2016
School leaders are expected to be visibly in charge, always on top of their game, doing the right things to advance the school, and exuding confidence and command. For these traits, leaders have extensive resources to draw on to foster their professional growth. The National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS), the regional and state…
Descriptors: Leadership Responsibility, Stress Variables, Administrator Behavior, Anxiety
Parsons, Dennis; Brandon, Jim – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
The study used qualitative case-study methodology and involved six participant superintendents in semi-structured interviews, two from each of western, Atlantic and northern Canada. The findings revealed work lives significantly impacted personal and family life. Regardless of location or size of school district, all described an all-consuming…
Descriptors: Superintendents, Family Work Relationship, Family Life, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedMacDermid, Shelley M.; And Others – Family Relations, 1994
Examined relationships among work-family tension and work conditions. Hypothesized that links between work-family tension and work conditions would be stronger in small than in large workplaces. Results indicated that some perceptions of work conditions differed between small and large workplaces, and that connections between work-family tension…
Descriptors: Family Life, Organization Size (Groups), Small Businesses, Stress Variables
Peer reviewedCrouter, Ann C; Manke, Beth – Family Relations, 1994
Reviews three workplace changes (downsizing, diffusing information via computerized telecommunication technologies, and increasing reliance on high-involvement team approaches) and examines their implications for employees and their families. Proposes that these changes are related to workplace characteristics that impact families, including work…
Descriptors: Change, Employee Attitudes, Family Life, Social Support Groups
Mehrotra, Jena; Gebeke, Debra – 1992
In recent years the study of work and family issues has expanded from a focus on men's unemployment, women's employment, and two-career couples to more complex issues of economics, structural and psychological characteristics of work, enactment of multiple roles, the work/family cycle, combined effects of partners' work role characteristics, and…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Employer Employee Relationship, Family Life, Role Conflict
Peer reviewedLoerch, Kay J.; And Others – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1989
Examined relationships among family domain variables and 3 sources of work-family conflict for 156 working men and women. Time-based conflict was best predicted by frequency of family intrusions and total role involvement for men and by family conflict for women. Strain-based and behavior-based conflict were explained by level of family conflict…
Descriptors: Conflict, Family Life, Family Relationship, Role Conflict
Peer reviewedBroman, Clifford L. – Journal of Black Studies, 2001
Investigated the link between job-related stressors and family life among African Americans. Data from African Americans who participated in the America's Changing Lives survey indicated that job latitude positively affected marital harmony, and physical demands negatively affected marital harmony. Psychosocial demands, job bother, and chronic…
Descriptors: Blacks, Family Life, Job Satisfaction, Marital Satisfaction
Sharp, Helen M. – School Administrator, 1998
The spouse of a former superintendent provides suggestions for minimizing, though never eliminating, harmful repercussions on their mates. Expectations of being a public persona, socializing with board members, sacrificing free time, responding to public criticism, and dealing with boards' private agendas demand creative coping approaches.…
Descriptors: Coping, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Life, Politics of Education
Aldwin, Carolyn M. – 1983
Although many studies have documented age-linked shifts in values, few studies have demonstrated the relationship between values and psychological adjustment. To explore the relationship between values, daily stressful experiences, positive experiences, and coping strategies, 100 white, middle-aged adults (ages 45-64 years) completed the Ways of…
Descriptors: Affiliation Need, Behavior Patterns, Coping, Family Life
Bruckner, Martha – School Administrator, 1998
A survey of 575 spouses of Nebraska school administrators portrayed mounting pressure from increasing work demands. Fully 90% indicated that afterhours activities are exhausting and disruptive to family life. Other problems include dual home/office personalities, everyday job stress, unshared child-rearing responsibilities, and loneliness. Still,…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Life, Leadership Responsibility
McGuigan, Dorothy G., Ed. – 1980
The studies in this volume highlight new research on the interaction of work and family and were presented at the 1978 conference, "Changing Family, Changing Workplace," held at the University of Michigan. The report on changes in the marriage role between 1957 and 1976 indicates that the family is still the core area of significance to…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Careers, Employed Women, Family Life
Peer reviewedBurke, Ronald J.; Weir, Tamara – Group and Organization Studies, 1981
Examined the relationship between occupational demands and nonwork experiences of 127 senior administrators of correctional institutions. Dependent variables included: negative-feeling states, marital and social participation, social support, psychosomatic symptoms, life style, and physical health. Results indicated particular occupational demands…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Role, Administrators, Correctional Institutions
Peer reviewedDey, Eric L. – Review of Higher Education, 1994
A study of 4,000 college faculty, using data from a national survey, investigated on- and off-campus sources of stress. Results indicated that while different faculty groups (male/female, tenured/nontenured, white/nonwhite) perceived varying stress levels, they also perceived different types of stress. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Faculty Workload, Family Life

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