When work is wanted after hours: Testing weekly stress of information communication technology demands using boundary theory

被引:91
作者
Park, YoungAh [1 ]
Liu, Yihao [1 ]
Headrick, Lucille [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, Sch Labor & Employment Relat, 504 E Armory, Champaign, IL 61820 USA
关键词
boundary control; boundary theory; ICT demands; stress; work-family support; PSYCHOLOGICAL DETACHMENT; TEACHER STRESS; SMARTPHONE USE; SLEEP QUALITY; SELF-EFFICACY; MODELS; VALIDATION; EMPLOYEES; STRAIN; EXPECTATIONS;
D O I
10.1002/job.2461
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Information communication technologies (ICTs; e.g., smartphones) enable employees to work anywhere and anytime, blurring work and family boundaries. Building on this trend, this study draws from work-family border/boundary theory to examine antecedents and consequences of employees' weekly experiences of ICT demands (i.e., being accessible and contacted for work after hours via ICTs). A sample of 546 elementary teachers completed a registration survey and a weekly diary for 5 weeks. Multilevel modeling results suggest that ICT demands as a form of work intrusion in the home can constitute a source of significant weekly strain (i.e., negative rumination, negative affect, and insomnia). As border crossers, teachers' adoption of a technological boundary tactic (i.e., keeping work email alerts turned off on mobile phones) was related to lower weekly ICT demands. As important border keepers at work, school principals' work-family support was related to teachers' lower weekly ICT demands, whereas parents' after-hours boundary expectations were related to teachers' higher weekly ICT demands. Moreover, teachers' boundary control was found as a mediating mechanism by which the two border keepers influenced teachers' ICT demands-negative rumination link. That is, teachers who received fewer boundary expectations and/or more work-family support had greater boundary control, which in turn buffered the ICT demands-negative rumination relationship.
引用
收藏
页码:518 / 534
页数:17
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