Academic job satisfaction questionnaire: Construction and validation in Saudi Arabia

Background: Colleges and universities are becoming increasingly accountable for teaching outcomes in order to meet rigorous accreditation standards. Job satisfaction (JS) seems more difficult to measure in the academic field in view of the complexity of roles, duties and responsibilities. Objectives...

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Main Authors: Abdullah M Al-Rubaish, Sheikh Idris A Rahim, Mahdi S Abumadini, Lade Wosornu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2011-01-01
Series:Journal of Family and Community Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jfcmonline.com/article.asp?issn=2230-8229;year=2011;volume=18;issue=1;spage=1;epage=7;aulast=Al-Rubaish
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spelling doaj-c004f5304ce04e00b0a3fe80294d2b4c2020-11-24T21:16:13ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsJournal of Family and Community Medicine2230-82292229-340X2011-01-011811710.4103/1319-1683.78630Academic job satisfaction questionnaire: Construction and validation in Saudi ArabiaAbdullah M Al-RubaishSheikh Idris A RahimMahdi S AbumadiniLade WosornuBackground: Colleges and universities are becoming increasingly accountable for teaching outcomes in order to meet rigorous accreditation standards. Job satisfaction (JS) seems more difficult to measure in the academic field in view of the complexity of roles, duties and responsibilities. Objectives: To compile and determine the psychometric properties of a proposed Academic Job Satisfaction Questionnaire (AJSQ) suitable for university faculty, and amenable to future upgrading. Materials and Methods: A 46-item five-option Likert-type draft questionnaire on JS was distributed for anonymous self-reporting by all the academic staff of five colleges in University of Dammam (n=340). The outcome measures were (1) factor analysis of the questionnaire items, (2) intra-factor α-Coefficient of Internal Consistency Reliability, (3) inter-factor correlations, (4) comparison of psychometric properties in separately analyzed main faculty subgroups. Results: The response rate was 72.9 percent. Factor analysis extracted eight factors which conjointly explained 60.3 percent of the variance in JS. These factors, in descending order of eigenvalue, were labeled "Authority", "Supervision", "Policies and Facilities", "My Work Itself", "Interpersonal Relationships", "Commitment", "Salary" and "Workload". Cronbach′s-α ranged from 0.90 in "Supervision" to 0.63 in "Salary" and "Workload". All inter-factor correlations were positive and significant, ranging from 0.65 to 0.23. The psychometric properties of the instrument in separately analyzed subgroups divided by sex, nationality, college and clinical duties produced fairly comparable findings. Conclusion: The AJSQ demonstrated good overall psychometric properties in terms of construct validity and internal consistency reliability in both the overall sample and its separately analyzed subgroups. Recommendation: To replicate these findings in larger multicenter samples of academic staff.http://www.jfcmonline.com/article.asp?issn=2230-8229;year=2011;volume=18;issue=1;spage=1;epage=7;aulast=Al-RubaishAcademic facultyaccreditationjob satisfactionjob questionnaireSaudi Arabia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdullah M Al-Rubaish
Sheikh Idris A Rahim
Mahdi S Abumadini
Lade Wosornu
spellingShingle Abdullah M Al-Rubaish
Sheikh Idris A Rahim
Mahdi S Abumadini
Lade Wosornu
Academic job satisfaction questionnaire: Construction and validation in Saudi Arabia
Journal of Family and Community Medicine
Academic faculty
accreditation
job satisfaction
job questionnaire
Saudi Arabia
author_facet Abdullah M Al-Rubaish
Sheikh Idris A Rahim
Mahdi S Abumadini
Lade Wosornu
author_sort Abdullah M Al-Rubaish
title Academic job satisfaction questionnaire: Construction and validation in Saudi Arabia
title_short Academic job satisfaction questionnaire: Construction and validation in Saudi Arabia
title_full Academic job satisfaction questionnaire: Construction and validation in Saudi Arabia
title_fullStr Academic job satisfaction questionnaire: Construction and validation in Saudi Arabia
title_full_unstemmed Academic job satisfaction questionnaire: Construction and validation in Saudi Arabia
title_sort academic job satisfaction questionnaire: construction and validation in saudi arabia
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Journal of Family and Community Medicine
issn 2230-8229
2229-340X
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Background: Colleges and universities are becoming increasingly accountable for teaching outcomes in order to meet rigorous accreditation standards. Job satisfaction (JS) seems more difficult to measure in the academic field in view of the complexity of roles, duties and responsibilities. Objectives: To compile and determine the psychometric properties of a proposed Academic Job Satisfaction Questionnaire (AJSQ) suitable for university faculty, and amenable to future upgrading. Materials and Methods: A 46-item five-option Likert-type draft questionnaire on JS was distributed for anonymous self-reporting by all the academic staff of five colleges in University of Dammam (n=340). The outcome measures were (1) factor analysis of the questionnaire items, (2) intra-factor α-Coefficient of Internal Consistency Reliability, (3) inter-factor correlations, (4) comparison of psychometric properties in separately analyzed main faculty subgroups. Results: The response rate was 72.9 percent. Factor analysis extracted eight factors which conjointly explained 60.3 percent of the variance in JS. These factors, in descending order of eigenvalue, were labeled "Authority", "Supervision", "Policies and Facilities", "My Work Itself", "Interpersonal Relationships", "Commitment", "Salary" and "Workload". Cronbach′s-α ranged from 0.90 in "Supervision" to 0.63 in "Salary" and "Workload". All inter-factor correlations were positive and significant, ranging from 0.65 to 0.23. The psychometric properties of the instrument in separately analyzed subgroups divided by sex, nationality, college and clinical duties produced fairly comparable findings. Conclusion: The AJSQ demonstrated good overall psychometric properties in terms of construct validity and internal consistency reliability in both the overall sample and its separately analyzed subgroups. Recommendation: To replicate these findings in larger multicenter samples of academic staff.
topic Academic faculty
accreditation
job satisfaction
job questionnaire
Saudi Arabia
url http://www.jfcmonline.com/article.asp?issn=2230-8229;year=2011;volume=18;issue=1;spage=1;epage=7;aulast=Al-Rubaish
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