ROLE AMBIGUITY, CONFLICT AND OVERLOAD AS PREDICTORS OF EMOTIONAL EXHAUSTION: THE MEDIATION EFFECT OF TEACHING SATISFACTION AND AFFECTIVE COMMITMENT
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Date
2024
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Publisher
Universiti Malaya,
Abstract
Owing to the emotionally demanding work context, emotional exhaustion is
conceived as a general concern in special education. In a group of 216 special
education teachers in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, this research has
investigated the direct effect of role ambiguity, role conflict, and role overload
on teacher’s emotional exhaustion. Participants completed the scales of
emotional exhaustion, role conflict, role Ambiguity, role overload, affective
engagement, and teaching satisfaction. Structural Equation Modelling Analysis
(SEM) has been adopted for testing the hypotheses of this research. Results
indicate that role overload had a positive significant direct impact on emotional
exhaustion. Similarly, role conflict shows a positive significant direct impact
on emotional exhaustion, whereas role ambiguity has a negligible direct impact
on emotional exhaustion. The estimation of the indirect path between
measurements of role stressors and emotional exhaustion through teaching
contentment reveals that teaching contentment mediates the effect of role
conflict on emotional exhaustion. The research suggests that there is no
intervention effect of teaching contentment on the impact of role overload on
emotional exhaustion and the impact of role overload and role conflict on
emotional exhaustion is mediated by affective engagement. The research
recommends further studies to explore the direct and indirect effect of role
ambiguity on emotional exhaustion.
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Keywords
Affective Commitmentو, Emotional Exhaustionو, Predictorsو, Teaching Satisfactionو
Citation
Alyamy, K. F., & Sau Cheong, L. (2020). Role ambiguity, conflict and overload as predictors of emotional exhaustion: the mediation effect of teaching satisfaction and affective commitment. International Journal of Education, Psychology and Counseling, 5(36), 37-55.