Antecedents and outcomes of meaningful work among school teachers

Type Journal Article - SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
Title Antecedents and outcomes of meaningful work among school teachers
Author(s)
Volume 43
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2017
Page numbers 1-10
URL http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2071-07632017000100005
Abstract
ORIENTATION: Quality education is dependent on the well-being, engagement, performance and retention of teachers. Meaningful work might affect these employee and organisational outcomes.
RESEARCH PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to investigate antecedents and outcomes of meaningful work among school teachers.
MOTIVATION FOR THE STUDY: Meaningful work underpins people's motivation and affects their well-being and job satisfaction. Furthermore, it is a significant pathway to healthy and authentic organisations. However, a research gap exists regarding the effects of different antecedents and outcomes of meaningful work.
RESEARCH APPROACH, DESIGN AND METHOD: A cross-sectional survey was used with a convenience sample of 513 teachers. The Work-Life Questionnaire, Revised Job Diagnostic Survey, Co-worker Relations Scale, Work and Meaning Inventory, Personal Resources Scale, Work Engagement Scale, Turnover Intention Scale and a measure of self-rated performance were administered.
MAIN FINDINGS: A calling orientation, job design and co-worker relations were associated with meaningful work. A low calling orientation and poor co-worker relationships predicted burnout. A calling orientation, a well-designed job, good co-worker relationships and meaningful work predicted work engagement. Job design was moderately associated with self-ratings of performance. The absence of a calling orientation predicted teachers' intention to leave the organisation.
PRACTICAL/MANAGERIAL IMPLICATIONS: Educational managers should consider implementing interventions to affect teachers' calling orientation (through job crafting), perceptions of the nature of their jobs (by allowing autonomy) and co-worker relations (through teambuilding) to promote perceptions of meaningful work. Promoting perceptions of meaningful work might contribute to lower burnout, higher work engagement, better self-ratings of performance and retention of teachers.
CONTRIBUTION/VALUE-ADD: This study contributes to scientific knowledge regarding the effects of three antecedents, namely a calling orientation, job design and co-worker relationships on meaningful work. It also contributed to knowledge about the effects of meaningful work on employee and organisational outcomes.

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