scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Emotion work and emotional exhaustion in teachers: The job and individual perspective

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors assessed the relative importance of job demands and emotional labour in predicting emotional exhaustion and found that emotional exhaustion is positively associated with emotional job demands, whereas emotional labour explained only 5% of the variance.
Abstract
Teaching requires much emotion work which takes its toll on teachers. Emotion work is usually studied from one of two perspectives, a job or an individual perspective. In this study, we assessed the relative importance of these two perspectives in predicting emotional exhaustion. More than 200 teachers completed a questionnaire comprising the DISQ (Demand‐Induced Strain Compensation Questionnaire), the Dutch Questionnaire on Emotional Labour (D‐QEL), and the UBOS (Utrechtse Burnout Schaal [Utrecht Burnout Scale]). In line with previous studies, our findings indicated that emotional exhaustion is positively associated with emotional job demands and surface acting. The relative importance of the two operationalisations of emotion work was assessed by comparing the results of two regression analyses. Whereas the model with job demands explained 18% of the variance, the model with emotional labour explained only 5%. In understanding what might contribute to emotional exhaustion in teachers, the emotional job ...

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Facets of teachers' emotional lives: A quantitative investigation of teachers' genuine, faked, and hidden emotions

TL;DR: This article investigated the frequency teachers' genuinely express, fake, and hide various emotions and how they relate to key teacher variables, finding that teachers frequently genuinely express positive emotions and hide negative emotions, and there are consistent relationships between genuine expression, faking, and hiding emotions and the proposed correlates.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of teachers’ emotional labour on teaching satisfaction: moderation of emotional intelligence

TL;DR: The authors used hierarchical regression analysis to examine teachers' perceptions of the relationships among the emotional job demands, emotional intelligence, emotional labour strategies and teaching satisfaction, with a particular focus on the moderating role of emotional intelligence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Work Environment Characteristics and Teacher Well-Being: The Mediation of Emotion Regulation Strategies.

TL;DR: The results of structural equation modeling indicated that the emotional job demands of teaching were detrimental to teacher well-being, whereas trust in colleagues was beneficial, and teachers who tend to use more reappraisal may be psychologically healthier than those tend to adopt more suppression.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationships between teachers’ emotional labor and their burnout and satisfaction: A meta-analytic review

TL;DR: A meta-analytic review of the associations between teachers' emotional labor strategies (surface acting, deep acting, and the expression of naturally felt emotions) and other relevant constructs is presented in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emotional demands, emotional labour and occupational outcomes in school principals: Modelling the relationships

TL;DR: Most research into emotional labour is focussed on front-line service staff and health professionals, in short-term interactions as mentioned in this paper, and little exists exploring the emotional labour involved in repeated o...
References
More filters
Book

Multiple Regression: Testing and Interpreting Interactions

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of predictor scaling on the coefficients of regression equations are investigated. But, they focus mainly on the effect of predictors scaling on coefficients of regressions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple Regression: Testing and Interpreting Interactions

TL;DR: In this article, multiple regression is used to test and interpret multiple regression interactions in the context of multiple-agent networks. But it is not suitable for single-agent systems, as discussed in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Job demands, job resources, and their relationship with burnout and engagement: a multi‐sample study

TL;DR: In this paper, a model is tested in which burnout and engagement have different predictors and different possible consequences, showing that burnout is mainly predicted by job demands but also by lack of job resources, whereas engagement is exclusively predicted by available job resources.
Related Papers (5)