Work and Family: The Perception of Balance Among Female Teachers in Northern Malaysia

Women’s participation in paid employment has become a common scenario even in non-western developing countries. For example in Malaysia, the trend is growing although the traditional gender role remains strong in Malaysian society. Even though working, women are still expected to assume major respon...

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Main Authors: Azelin Aziz, Artemis Chang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UUM Press 2013-11-01
Series:International Journal of Management Studies
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=9ff3c0ed-5212-46fe-8f55-6f3df33f3528
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spelling doaj-f7405d48c21446fea2f9049d3d13cf752021-06-15T13:20:27ZengUUM PressInternational Journal of Management Studies2232-16082180-24672013-11-0110.32890/ijms.20.2.2013.10395Work and Family: The Perception of Balance Among Female Teachers in Northern MalaysiaAzelin AzizArtemis ChangWomen’s participation in paid employment has become a common scenario even in non-western developing countries. For example in Malaysia, the trend is growing although the traditional gender role remains strong in Malaysian society. Even though working, women are still expected to assume major responsibilities at home. Thus, as opposed to men, women in this society face the challenge to satisfactorily balance work and family. This study was carried out to explore how Malaysian women perceive the meaning of a balanced work-family life. Sampling women teachers, the interview findings revealed that work-family balance was mainly perceived in terms of an individual’s ‘ability to fulfill role obligation’ appropriately in both the work and family domains. A few participants also viewed balance in the context of role satisfaction and role interference. Overall, the results support the assumption in the literature that perceptions of work-family experience are not universal, rather, the construct of work-family balance is culture-specific.   Keywords: Work-family interface, cross-culture, role demands.https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=9ff3c0ed-5212-46fe-8f55-6f3df33f3528
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Azelin Aziz
Artemis Chang
spellingShingle Azelin Aziz
Artemis Chang
Work and Family: The Perception of Balance Among Female Teachers in Northern Malaysia
International Journal of Management Studies
author_facet Azelin Aziz
Artemis Chang
author_sort Azelin Aziz
title Work and Family: The Perception of Balance Among Female Teachers in Northern Malaysia
title_short Work and Family: The Perception of Balance Among Female Teachers in Northern Malaysia
title_full Work and Family: The Perception of Balance Among Female Teachers in Northern Malaysia
title_fullStr Work and Family: The Perception of Balance Among Female Teachers in Northern Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Work and Family: The Perception of Balance Among Female Teachers in Northern Malaysia
title_sort work and family: the perception of balance among female teachers in northern malaysia
publisher UUM Press
series International Journal of Management Studies
issn 2232-1608
2180-2467
publishDate 2013-11-01
description Women’s participation in paid employment has become a common scenario even in non-western developing countries. For example in Malaysia, the trend is growing although the traditional gender role remains strong in Malaysian society. Even though working, women are still expected to assume major responsibilities at home. Thus, as opposed to men, women in this society face the challenge to satisfactorily balance work and family. This study was carried out to explore how Malaysian women perceive the meaning of a balanced work-family life. Sampling women teachers, the interview findings revealed that work-family balance was mainly perceived in terms of an individual’s ‘ability to fulfill role obligation’ appropriately in both the work and family domains. A few participants also viewed balance in the context of role satisfaction and role interference. Overall, the results support the assumption in the literature that perceptions of work-family experience are not universal, rather, the construct of work-family balance is culture-specific.   Keywords: Work-family interface, cross-culture, role demands.
url https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=9ff3c0ed-5212-46fe-8f55-6f3df33f3528
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