Item
Causal modelling of the influence of demographic variables on work-stimulated stress among early childhood educators in South Africa.
- Title
- Causal modelling of the influence of demographic variables on work-stimulated stress among early childhood educators in South Africa.
- Author(s)
- Okeke, C.I., & Akobi, T.O. See all items with this value
- Date
- 2023 See all items with this value
- Description
- Work-related stress has emerged as a pervasive global issue that needs to be investigated by specialists around the world. Work stress is a condition of pressure brought on by one's line of work and occurs when demands of the job are too great for an employee's abilities or resources. The study was undertaken to examine the direct and indirect causal effect of some demographic variables on workstimulated stress among early childhood educators in South Africa. Hence, the researchers developed and validated a model involving causal linkages between early childhood educators’ demographic variables such as age, gender, race, marital status, income and educational qualification, and workstimulated stress. The study adopted an ex-post-facto research design. The sample comprised one hundred and twenty (120) early childhood educators across twenty (20) Early Childhood Education (ECE) centres. A stratified random sampling technique was used to select the early childhood educators for the study. One validated instrument on work-stimulated stress developed by the researchers on a four-point rating scale was used to collect the data for the study, while path analysis and multiple regression analysis were employed for data analysis. The findings of this study documented the more parsimonious model, which is effective in predicting the influence of demographic variables on work-stimulated stress among early childhood educators. The results further indicated that three (Age, Gender, and Marital Status) out of the six predictor variables caused early childhood educators’ work-stimulated stress more than the other variables. The implications of these findings for education policymakers, administrators, and teachers are discussed.
- Publisher
- International Journal of Research in Business & Social Science See all items with this value
- Identifier
- DOI
- volume
- 12
- issue
- 2
- pages
- 662-671
- Item sets
- Journal Articles
- Media