Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools
The usefulness of teacher perceptual data in school organizational climate and job satisfaction research was illustrated by a study of two selected residential and two non residential schools in Kuala Lumpur. Seven school climate dimensions of mission and goal consensus, empowerment, student supp...
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my.upm.eprints.89762024-03-12T00:03:06Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8976/ Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools Ong, Boon Puah The usefulness of teacher perceptual data in school organizational climate and job satisfaction research was illustrated by a study of two selected residential and two non residential schools in Kuala Lumpur. Seven school climate dimensions of mission and goal consensus, empowerment, student support, affiliation, professional interest, resource adequacy and work pressure were assessed by seventy teachers from residential schools and sixty four teachers from non residential schools. Comparisons of school climate in the selected residential and non residential schools revealed statistically significant difference on six dimensions, namely mission and goal consensus, empowerment, student support, affiliation, professional interest and resource adequacy. Teachers in the selected residential schools perceived more positive school environments than teachers in the selected non residential schools. The selected school teachers' job satisfaction were determined by two separate measures of facet specific and facet free job satisfaction. Comparisons of teachers' facet specific job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools revealed no statistically significant difference on teachers' intrinsic, extrinsic and social satisfaction. Nevertheless, comparisons of teachers' facet free job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools revealed statistically significant difference on all the five global measures of occupation satisfaction, occupation expectation satisfaction, present job satisfaction, re-entry and optional retirement decision. Teachers in residential schools were found to be more satisfied with their facet free overall job satisfaction. Analysis for the combined sample revealed that majority of the teachers were satisfied with their social satisfaction; only three out of ten teachers perceived high level of intrinsic satisfaction while seven out of ten teachers were dissatisfied with extrinsic satisfaction. The overall job satisfaction for the combined sample was only at the medium level. This study also revealed that majority of the combined sample only perceived highly of affiliation while the perceptions for empowerment, student support, professional interest, mission and goal consensus, resource adequacy and work pressure dimensions were only at the medium level. 1997-11 Project Paper Report NonPeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8976/1/FPP_1997_30%20IR.pdf Ong, Boon Puah (1997) Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools. [Project Paper Report] Teachers - Job satisfaction - Case studies English |
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Teachers - Job satisfaction - Case studies Ong, Boon Puah Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools |
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The usefulness of teacher perceptual data in school organizational climate
and job satisfaction research was illustrated by a study of two selected residential
and two non residential schools in Kuala Lumpur. Seven school climate
dimensions of mission and goal consensus, empowerment, student support,
affiliation, professional interest, resource adequacy and work pressure were
assessed by seventy teachers from residential schools and sixty four teachers from
non residential schools. Comparisons of school climate in the selected residential
and non residential schools revealed statistically significant difference on six
dimensions, namely mission and goal consensus, empowerment, student support,
affiliation, professional interest and resource adequacy. Teachers in the selected residential schools perceived more positive school environments than teachers in
the selected non residential schools.
The selected school teachers' job satisfaction were determined by two
separate measures of facet specific and facet free job satisfaction. Comparisons of
teachers' facet specific job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools
revealed no statistically significant difference on teachers' intrinsic, extrinsic and
social satisfaction. Nevertheless, comparisons of teachers' facet free job
satisfaction in residential and non residential schools revealed statistically
significant difference on all the five global measures of occupation satisfaction,
occupation expectation satisfaction, present job satisfaction, re-entry and optional
retirement decision. Teachers in residential schools were found to be more satisfied
with their facet free overall job satisfaction. Analysis for the combined sample revealed that majority of the teachers
were satisfied with their social satisfaction; only three out of ten teachers
perceived high level of intrinsic satisfaction while seven out of ten teachers were
dissatisfied with extrinsic satisfaction. The overall job satisfaction for the
combined sample was only at the medium level. This study also revealed that
majority of the combined sample only perceived highly of affiliation while the
perceptions for empowerment, student support, professional interest, mission and
goal consensus, resource adequacy and work pressure dimensions were only at the
medium level. |
format |
Project Paper Report |
author |
Ong, Boon Puah |
author_facet |
Ong, Boon Puah |
author_sort |
Ong, Boon Puah |
title |
Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools |
title_short |
Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools |
title_full |
Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools |
title_fullStr |
Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools |
title_full_unstemmed |
Organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools |
title_sort |
organizational climate and teachers' job satisfaction in residential and non residential schools |
publishDate |
1997 |
url |
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8976/1/FPP_1997_30%20IR.pdf http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/8976/ |
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