As a Happy Kindergarten Teacher: The Mediating Effect of Happiness Between Role Stress and Turnover Intention

被引:0
作者
Chao-Chun Yang
Chih-Wen Fan
Kuan-Ming Chen
Shih-Chi Hsu
Chin-Lung Chien
机构
[1] Yilan-Datong Elementary School,Department of Educational Administration and Management
[2] National Dong Hwa University,Research Center for Testing and Assessment
[3] National Academy for Educational Research,Department of Psychology
[4] Kaohsiung Medical University,Positive Psychology Center
[5] Kaohsiung Medical University,undefined
来源
The Asia-Pacific Education Researcher | 2018年 / 27卷
关键词
Happiness; Kindergarten teacher; Positive education; Role stress; Subjective well-being; Turnover intention;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Kindergarten teacher turnover is an important topic in education, especially in East Asia. Two approaches, the disease model and positive psychology perspective, are integrated to investigate kindergarten teachers’ turnover intention, and the “happy/productive teacher” hypothesis that happy teachers have lower turnover intention is tested. A comprehensive model that integrates role stress, subjective well-being (SWB), and turnover intention is proposed herein. A mail survey was conducted, consisting of 272 kindergarten teachers in Taiwan. Structural equation modeling was used for the data analysis. The “happy/productive teacher” concept was supported in that teachers’ SWB has a negative effect on turnover intention. Role stress was found to have a negative effect on SWB and a positive indirect effect on turnover intention completely mediated by SWB. In conclusion, role stress and SWB both have significant effects on turnover intention. However, SWB is a more direct and powerful antecedent than role stress. This study has important theoretical and practical implications for kindergarten teachers’ turnover intention from the positive psychology perspective, and may contribute to the positive education in Asia.
引用
收藏
页码:431 / 440
页数:9
相关论文
共 152 条
[1]  
Barak MEM(2001)Antecedents to retention and turnover among child welfare, social work, and other human service employees: What can we learn from past research? A review and metanalysis Social Service Review 75 625-661
[2]  
Nissly JA(1981)A path-analytic study of the consequences of role conflict and ambiguity Academy of Management Journal 24 417-424
[3]  
Levin A(2013)Positive psychology interventions: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled studies BMC Public Health 13 119-934
[4]  
Bedeian AG(2010)A meta-analytic examination of the relationship between job satisfaction and subjective well-being Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 83 915-441
[5]  
Armenakis AA(2012)Emotional intelligence, job satisfaction, well-being and engagement: Explaining organizational commitment and turnover intentions in policing Human Resource Management Journal 22 428-1345
[6]  
Bolier L(2011)Modelling job stress as a mediating role in predicting turnover intention The Service Industries Journal 31 1327-77
[7]  
Haverman M(2009)Public/private preschool teachers’ turnover in Taiwan: A test on correlative variables and theories Journal of Research on Elementary and Secondary Education 33 53-34
[8]  
Westerhof GJ(2009)A study on the kindergarten and childcare center teachers’ turnover intention in Taiwan: Exploring the effect of the demographics, social exchange, ethical fit, distributive justice, job loading and salary Journal of National Pingtung University of Education 32 1-325
[9]  
Riper H(2008)Testing mediation and suppression effects of latent variables: Bootstrapping with structural equation models Organizational Research Methods 11 296-470
[10]  
Smit F(2009)Multiple ways to subjective well-being: The divergence and convergence of double self-construals in Taiwan Chinese Journal of Psychology 54 453-125