• Title/Summary/Keyword: social support outside the workplace

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The Relationships Among Social Support in the Workplace, Social Support Outside the Workplace, Child Care Teachers' Psychological Burnout, and Teacher-Child Interactions (직장 내·외 사회적 지지와 보육교사의 심리적 소진 및 교사-영유아 상호작용 간의 관계)

  • Park, Nam-Shim;Park, Bokyung;Kim, Mee-Ok
    • Korean Journal of Childcare and Education
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    • v.17 no.6
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    • pp.73-92
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    • 2021
  • Objective: This study examined the relationships among social support in the workplace, social support outside the workplace, child care teachers' psychological burnout, and teacher-child interactions. Methods: The subjects of this study were 262 child care teachers and they responded to questionnaires on research variables. Data were analyzed using structural equation modeling. Results: First, social support outside the workplace had a direct effect on teacher-child interactions; that is, child care teachers, who perceived that they received a high level of social support outside the workplace, had high-quality interactions with children. Second, social support in the workplace had an indirect effect on teacher-child interactions through child care teachers' psychological burnout. In other words, child care teachers, who perceived that they received a high level of social support in the workplace, experienced less psychological burnout, which led to high-quality interactions with children. Conclusion/Implications: This study confirmed that the paths in which social support in the workplace and social support outside the workplace influence teacher-child interactions were different. Although the pathways were different, the results of this study emphasize that both types of social support are important factors that promote teacher-child interactions.

A Study on Child Day Care and Job Satisfaction of Married Women Employed Outside Home (기혼직장여성의 탁아실태와 직무만족도)

  • 이성희;강성희
    • Journal of Families and Better Life
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    • v.20 no.3
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    • pp.101-111
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    • 2002
  • The purpose of this study was to obtain data on the child care support and job satisfaction of married women employed outside home. The data for this study were collected from a survey of 350 married women employed outside home who were residing in North Cholla Province. Major fimding are summarized in the following. First, many married women were pressured by the burdens child rearing(54.5%) and houshold chores(39.6%). Second, the daycare arrangements for children under age seven were diverse. Just under half of the children were cared for by the employed mother'parents(25.1%), or by the mother's parents-in law(21.1%). The rest were sent to daycare center(40.6%), cared for by a hired helper(7.6%), or sent to an industrial on- site daycare center(1.0%). Third, about half of the married employed mothers(47.5%) wished for an on-site daycare service at their workplace. Fourth, the variables that affected employed mothers job satisfaction were age, job, husband's job type, the income of the mother, the reason of the mother's employment, the degree of husband's houshold labor participation, and the type of social and employer's support for chid care.