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Price: EUR 250.00Authors: Golden, Timothy D. | Schoenleber, Alisa H.W.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Employees frequently do not engage in help-seeking due to the associated social costs. Despite the importance of help-seeking, little research has been done to explore factors affecting whether individuals will or will not engage in help-seeking at work, and existing research has thus far not addressed help seeking in the telework context. OBJECTIVE: This paper expands the current literature on help-seeking by exploring this behavior in the context of teleworkers and develops propositions …regarding how aspects of virtual work environments will help determine teleworkers' willingness to engage in help-seeking behavior. METHODS: This article presents a review with critical analysis and integration of selected telework and help-seeking literatures. Results: Grounded in the literature on inequity/indebtedness and the literature on threats to self-esteem, theoretically-derived research propositions are developed that help shed insights into help seeking behaviors in the telework context. These research propositions encompass media presence and the teleworker's perceived opportunity for reciprocation, and their associated impacts on the perceived cost of seeking help. CONCLUSION: The proposed research propositions provide practitioners and researchers a means to be better able to assess telework applications and prevent unintended effects. Through such systematic understanding of how telework alters the perceived cost of seeking help and the teleworker's willingness to seek help, telework may be further improved to contribute to more effective and productive individuals and organizations. Show more
Keywords: Telework, help-seeking, telecommuting, virtual work
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-131818
Citation: Work, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 83-90, 2014
Authors: Duxbury, Linda | Halinski, Michael
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Proponents of telework arrangements assert that those who telework have more control over their work and family domains than their counterparts who are not permitted to work from home. OBJECTIVE: Using Karasek's theory we hypothesized that the relationship between demands (hours in work per week; hours in childcare per week) and strain (work role overload; family role overload) would be moderated by the number of hours the employee spent per week teleworking (control). METHODS: To …determine how the number of telework hours relates to work role overload and family role overload, we follow the test for moderation and mediation using hierarchical multiple regression analysis as outlined by Frazier et al. [50] We used survey data collected from 1,806 male and female professional employees who spent at least one hour per week working from home during regular hours (i.e. teleworking). RESULTS: As hypothesized, the number of hours in telework per week negatively moderated the relation between work demands (total hours in paid employment per week) and work strain (work role overload). Contrary to our hypothesis, the number of hours in telework per week only partially mediated the relation between family demands (hours a week in childcare) and family role overload (strain). CONCLUSIONS: The findings from this study support the idea that the control offered by telework is domain specific (helps employees meet demands at work but not at home). Show more
Keywords: Telecommute, Karasek's demand-control, moderation, mediation
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-141858
Citation: Work, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 91-103, 2014
Authors: Moon, Nathan W. | Linden, Maureen A. | Bricout, John C. | Baker, Paul M.A.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Telework has been promoted as a viable workplace accommodation for people with disabilities since the 1990s, when information and communication technologies (ICT) had developed sufficiently to facilitate its widespread adoption. This initial research and accompanying policy recommendations were prescriptive in nature and frequently aimed at employers. OBJECTIVE: This article adds to existing policy models for facilitating successful telework outcomes for people with disabilities. Drawing upon two studies by the …Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Workplace Accommodations, we expound on employee-side considerations in the implementation of telework. METHODS: Our policy model utilizes established typologies for policy evaluation to develop a process model that considers rationales and implementation factors for telework among people with physical disabilities. RESULTS: Telework may be used as an accommodation for disability, but employee rationales for telework are more complex, involving work-life balance, strategies for pain and fatigue not formally recognized as disability, and expediency in travel and transportation. Implementation of telework as a component of workplace operations is similarly multifaceted, involving non-technology accommodations to realize job restructuring left incomplete by telework. CONCLUSIONS: Our model grounds new empirical research in this area. We also renew our call for additional research on effective telework practices for people with disabilities. Show more
Keywords: Employment, workplace accommodation, work environment
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-131819
Citation: Work, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 105-115, 2014
Authors: McNaughton, David | Rackensperger, Tracy | Dorn, Dana | Wilson, Natasha
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Telework, the use of distance communication technologies to participate in the workforce, has been suggested as a promising employment strategy for individuals with disabilities. OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to obtain a better understanding of the benefits and negative impacts of telework, as well as the supports and challenges to telework activities, for persons who use augmentative and alternative communication (AAC). METHODS: This study used a series of focus group discussions, …conducted on the internet, to examine the employment experiences of nine individuals with disabilities who used AAC and who held jobs that involved the use of telework. RESULTS: Four major themes emerged from the discussion: (a) benefits of telework, (b) negative impacts of telework, (c) strategies for addressing negative impacts of telework, and (d) recommendations for improving employment outcomes for individuals who use AAC. CONCLUSIONS: In summary, while participants identified the elimination of travel time and flexible work schedules as key strengths of telework, concerns were expressed regarding feelings of isolation and the difficulty in separating home and work environments. The participants also emphasized the important role of educational programs in supporting the acquisition of literacy and self-advocacy skills, and the need for post-secondary programs to support the school-to-workplace transition. Show more
Keywords: Employment, severe disability, cerebral palsy, autism, assistive technology
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-141860
Citation: Work, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 117-126, 2014
Authors: Quinton, Melanie C.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: This paper uses a case study to examine attitudinal barriers to employment and underemployment. We follow the career path of PR, a woman with multiple physical impairments, as she seeks financial independence through several employment strategies. In these, she faced attitudinal barriers and employment situations without opportunity for advancement. Eventually, PR opens her own business, turning to an alternative loan program to acquire the funds necessary to purchase a ready-made vehicle that matches her needs for …accessible transportation. Use of this vehicle to provide delivery services for her business has more than doubled her income. Show more
Keywords: Attitudinal barriers, new horizon loan program, disabilities, employment
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-141861
Citation: Work, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 127-130, 2014
Authors: Balassa-Myracle, Julia
Article Type: Research Article
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-131815
Citation: Work, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 131-132, 2014
Authors: Berg, Kevin
Article Type: Research Article
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-131816
Citation: Work, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 133-136, 2014
Authors: Gilman, Kathy
Article Type: Research Article
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-131817
Citation: Work, vol. 48, no. 1, pp. 137-140, 2014
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