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Issue title: Gender, Work Schedules and Work/Family Regulations
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Riel, Jessica | Messing, Karen
Affiliations: Centre interdisciplinaire pour l'étude de la biologie, la santé, la société et l'environnement (CINBIOSE), Université du Québec à Montréal, Montreal, Canada
Note: [] Address for correspondence: Jessica Riel, University of Quebec in Montreal, CINBIOSE (SB-1983), C.P. 8888, Succ. Centre-Ville, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3C 3P8. Tel.: +1 514 987 3000 6890#; Fax: +1 514 987 6183; E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: Québec teachers have been identified as having a high level of stress and having difficulties with work-family balancing (WFB). An analysis of their work activity was done to identify task elements that could be changed. Participants: Work of 15 teachers was observed and 20 other teachers were interviewed. Methods: Ergonomic analysis, a mixed method that combines qualitative analysis with some quantitative data: 87 hours' observation; 15 interviews. Environmental parameters were recorded in 8 classrooms and in two faculty workrooms. Working postures were recorded. Results: Teachers were subject to numerous demands in an often inadequate environment. A new management practice required teachers to spend 300 min/week outside class but in school, where their work could be monitored. The timed and scheduled tasks could not be done in the rooms provided due to overcrowding, inadequate physical environment, and lack of access to computers and telephones. Time at home decreased but work done at home did not. Conclusions: The physical environment of teaching impacts teaching activity. Work organization that treats a complex, results-oriented task as if it could be well represented by the number of supervised minutes spent on it can be problematic. WFB should be considered when work is re-organized.
Keywords: Work-family conflict, job control, strategies, ergonomics, work analysis
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2011-1268
Journal: Work, vol. 40, no. Supplement 1, pp. 59-70, 2011
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