Do you know your ABCs? Affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers

Previous research showed that work-family conflict is negatively correlated with work engagement. As working mothers are required to fulfil multiple roles, their challenges include balancing work and family demands, which could potentially cause work-family conflict and affect their work engagement....

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Main Author: Teo, Chieng Yi
Other Authors: Eunae Cho
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76888
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-768882019-12-10T10:59:09Z Do you know your ABCs? Affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers Teo, Chieng Yi Eunae Cho School of Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Previous research showed that work-family conflict is negatively correlated with work engagement. As working mothers are required to fulfil multiple roles, their challenges include balancing work and family demands, which could potentially cause work-family conflict and affect their work engagement. As such, factors to mitigate the negative impact of work-family conflict is critical. In the present research, with the Conservation of Resources model as a theoretical framework, the moderating effects of Affect, Behaviour, and Cognition (ABC) of working mothers on their work engagement were investigated. Specifically, working mothers’ emotion regulation strategies (Affect), boundary management strategies (Behaviour), and work-family balance self-efficacy (Cognition) were examined as moderators of the relationship between work-family conflict and work engagement. A quantitative, longitudinal survey design was used in this study. 152 working mothers were recruited from different organisations in various countries. Findings did not provide support for our hypotheses. Exploratory analyses revealed that higher levels of work engagement were associated with less work-family conflict. No interaction effects were found for the moderators of the relationship, suggesting that the effects of work-family conflict and work engagement were robust. Findings highlight the positive impact that work engagement can have on work-family conflict and the necessity to consider other factors in future research as possible moderators of the relationship. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2019-04-22T01:23:55Z 2019-04-22T01:23:55Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76888 en Nanyang Technological University 67 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Teo, Chieng Yi
Do you know your ABCs? Affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers
description Previous research showed that work-family conflict is negatively correlated with work engagement. As working mothers are required to fulfil multiple roles, their challenges include balancing work and family demands, which could potentially cause work-family conflict and affect their work engagement. As such, factors to mitigate the negative impact of work-family conflict is critical. In the present research, with the Conservation of Resources model as a theoretical framework, the moderating effects of Affect, Behaviour, and Cognition (ABC) of working mothers on their work engagement were investigated. Specifically, working mothers’ emotion regulation strategies (Affect), boundary management strategies (Behaviour), and work-family balance self-efficacy (Cognition) were examined as moderators of the relationship between work-family conflict and work engagement. A quantitative, longitudinal survey design was used in this study. 152 working mothers were recruited from different organisations in various countries. Findings did not provide support for our hypotheses. Exploratory analyses revealed that higher levels of work engagement were associated with less work-family conflict. No interaction effects were found for the moderators of the relationship, suggesting that the effects of work-family conflict and work engagement were robust. Findings highlight the positive impact that work engagement can have on work-family conflict and the necessity to consider other factors in future research as possible moderators of the relationship.
author2 Eunae Cho
author_facet Eunae Cho
Teo, Chieng Yi
format Final Year Project
author Teo, Chieng Yi
author_sort Teo, Chieng Yi
title Do you know your ABCs? Affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers
title_short Do you know your ABCs? Affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers
title_full Do you know your ABCs? Affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers
title_fullStr Do you know your ABCs? Affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers
title_full_unstemmed Do you know your ABCs? Affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers
title_sort do you know your abcs? affective, behavioural, and cognitive strategies as moderators of the link between work-family conflict and work engagement among working mothers
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76888
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