Interference between work and nonwork roles: The development of a new South African instrument

Orientation: The interference between work and personal life is a central issue in the 21st century as employees attempt to balance or integrate their involvement in multiple social roles. Research purpose: The purpose of this study was to, (1) develop new items for a more comprehensive work−nonwork...

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Main Authors: Eileen Koekemoer, Karina Mostert, Ian Rothmann Jr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2010-10-01
Series:SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/907
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spelling doaj-a61ba97bf1164507a9d231024453d0512020-11-24T23:03:47ZengAOSISSA Journal of Industrial Psychology0258-52002071-07632010-10-01361e1e1410.4102/sajip.v36i1.907779Interference between work and nonwork roles: The development of a new South African instrumentEileen Koekemoer0Karina Mostert1Ian Rothmann Jr2Skool vir Mensehulpbron-Wetenskappe/ School of Human Resource Sciences Potchefstroom Kampus/ Potchefstroom CampusAssociate Professor:North-West universityAfriforte Pty LtdOrientation: The interference between work and personal life is a central issue in the 21st century as employees attempt to balance or integrate their involvement in multiple social roles. Research purpose: The purpose of this study was to, (1) develop new items for a more comprehensive work−nonwork interference instrument, (2) evaluate the newly developed items to retain those items that accurately capture the different dimensions and (3) eliminate undesirable items from the different subscales in the instrument. Motivation for the study: Although the interaction between work and personal life has received extensive attention in the work−family fields of research, various theoretical, empirical and measurement issues need to be addressed. Research design, approach and method: A cross-sectional survey design was used to collect the data. Main findings: Initially, 89 items were developed. During the pilot study among mineworkers (n = 245), 41 poor items were eliminated on the basis of descriptive statistics, inter-item correlations, item-total correlations and the qualitative investigation of items highly redundant in terms of wording. Thereafter, the instrument (48 items) was administered to 366 support and academic personnel at a tertiary institution. Using Rasch analyses and item correlations, 18 additional items were eliminated, resulting in a 30-item instrument (15 items were retained to measure work-nonwork interference and 15 items to measure nonwork-work interference). Practical/managerial implications: A major theoretical limitation to the measurement of work−family interference relates to the dimensionality and inconsistent measurement of the directionality of interference. Contribution/value-add: With the development of this new instrument, several of the theoretical and measurement limitations voiced by previous researchers have been addressed, providing this instrument with distinct advantages over previous work−family instruments.https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/907measurementRasch analysesscale developmenttheoretical limitationswork-nonwork interference
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eileen Koekemoer
Karina Mostert
Ian Rothmann Jr
spellingShingle Eileen Koekemoer
Karina Mostert
Ian Rothmann Jr
Interference between work and nonwork roles: The development of a new South African instrument
SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
measurement
Rasch analyses
scale development
theoretical limitations
work-nonwork interference
author_facet Eileen Koekemoer
Karina Mostert
Ian Rothmann Jr
author_sort Eileen Koekemoer
title Interference between work and nonwork roles: The development of a new South African instrument
title_short Interference between work and nonwork roles: The development of a new South African instrument
title_full Interference between work and nonwork roles: The development of a new South African instrument
title_fullStr Interference between work and nonwork roles: The development of a new South African instrument
title_full_unstemmed Interference between work and nonwork roles: The development of a new South African instrument
title_sort interference between work and nonwork roles: the development of a new south african instrument
publisher AOSIS
series SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
issn 0258-5200
2071-0763
publishDate 2010-10-01
description Orientation: The interference between work and personal life is a central issue in the 21st century as employees attempt to balance or integrate their involvement in multiple social roles. Research purpose: The purpose of this study was to, (1) develop new items for a more comprehensive work−nonwork interference instrument, (2) evaluate the newly developed items to retain those items that accurately capture the different dimensions and (3) eliminate undesirable items from the different subscales in the instrument. Motivation for the study: Although the interaction between work and personal life has received extensive attention in the work−family fields of research, various theoretical, empirical and measurement issues need to be addressed. Research design, approach and method: A cross-sectional survey design was used to collect the data. Main findings: Initially, 89 items were developed. During the pilot study among mineworkers (n = 245), 41 poor items were eliminated on the basis of descriptive statistics, inter-item correlations, item-total correlations and the qualitative investigation of items highly redundant in terms of wording. Thereafter, the instrument (48 items) was administered to 366 support and academic personnel at a tertiary institution. Using Rasch analyses and item correlations, 18 additional items were eliminated, resulting in a 30-item instrument (15 items were retained to measure work-nonwork interference and 15 items to measure nonwork-work interference). Practical/managerial implications: A major theoretical limitation to the measurement of work−family interference relates to the dimensionality and inconsistent measurement of the directionality of interference. Contribution/value-add: With the development of this new instrument, several of the theoretical and measurement limitations voiced by previous researchers have been addressed, providing this instrument with distinct advantages over previous work−family instruments.
topic measurement
Rasch analyses
scale development
theoretical limitations
work-nonwork interference
url https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/907
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