Reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Work-life conflict has been repeatedly demonstrated to have a negative impact on individuals and organizations alike. Although the negative impact of work-life conflict has been recognized in the Industrial Organizational Psychology and O...

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Main Author: Laughman, Courtney Ann
Other Authors: Williams, Jane R.
Language:en_US
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/6730
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-67302019-05-10T15:21:35Z Reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention Laughman, Courtney Ann Williams, Jane R. Boyd, Elizabeth Ashburn-Nardo, Leslie Stockdale, Margaret S. Intervention Work life conflict Work and family -- Research Quality of work life Work environment Boundaries -- Research Intervention (Administrative procedure) Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Work-life conflict has been repeatedly demonstrated to have a negative impact on individuals and organizations alike. Although the negative impact of work-life conflict has been recognized in the Industrial Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavioral literature, very few researchers have developed interventions to reduce it. Moreover, the interventions currently in existence tend not to be practical, grounded in relevant theory, or experimentally tested. Thus, the present study sought to create and test an intervention based upon concepts from border theory and conservation of resources theory. Specifically, using these theories, the intervention sought to provide segmentation techniques as a resource for participants to reduce work-life conflict. The intervention was tested on a group of university employees. Results were unsupportive of predicted hypotheses, the intervention was not found to significantly impact segmentation, work-life conflict, work outcomes, or personal outcomes. Future directions, theoretical and practical contributions, and limitations are discussed. Despite insignificant findings, the present study offers practical and theoretical guidance for organizations and researchers interested in developing interventions to reduce work-life conflict. 2015-09-03T18:06:56Z 2015-09-03T18:06:56Z 2014-11 Thesis Laughman, Courtney Ann. M.S., Purdue University, May 2015. Reducing the Tension Between Work and Life Roles: Testing a Work Life Conflict Intervention. Major Professor: Jane R. Williams. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/6730 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Intervention
Work life conflict
Work and family -- Research
Quality of work life
Work environment
Boundaries -- Research
Intervention (Administrative procedure)
spellingShingle Intervention
Work life conflict
Work and family -- Research
Quality of work life
Work environment
Boundaries -- Research
Intervention (Administrative procedure)
Laughman, Courtney Ann
Reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Work-life conflict has been repeatedly demonstrated to have a negative impact on individuals and organizations alike. Although the negative impact of work-life conflict has been recognized in the Industrial Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavioral literature, very few researchers have developed interventions to reduce it. Moreover, the interventions currently in existence tend not to be practical, grounded in relevant theory, or experimentally tested. Thus, the present study sought to create and test an intervention based upon concepts from border theory and conservation of resources theory. Specifically, using these theories, the intervention sought to provide segmentation techniques as a resource for participants to reduce work-life conflict. The intervention was tested on a group of university employees. Results were unsupportive of predicted hypotheses, the intervention was not found to significantly impact segmentation, work-life conflict, work outcomes, or personal outcomes. Future directions, theoretical and practical contributions, and limitations are discussed. Despite insignificant findings, the present study offers practical and theoretical guidance for organizations and researchers interested in developing interventions to reduce work-life conflict.
author2 Williams, Jane R.
author_facet Williams, Jane R.
Laughman, Courtney Ann
author Laughman, Courtney Ann
author_sort Laughman, Courtney Ann
title Reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention
title_short Reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention
title_full Reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention
title_fullStr Reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention
title_full_unstemmed Reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention
title_sort reducing the tension between work and life roles: testing a work life conflict intervention
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/6730
work_keys_str_mv AT laughmancourtneyann reducingthetensionbetweenworkandliferolestestingaworklifeconflictintervention
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