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Keeping up with this workload is difficult: the ramifications of work overload on career resilience

Tehreem Fatima (Lahore Business School, The University of Lahore–Sargodha Campus, Sargodha, Pakistan)
Ahmad Raza Bilal (Faculty of Business and Management Sciences, Superior University, Lahore, Pakistan)
Muhammad Waqas (Lahore Business School, The University of Lahore, Sargodha Campus, Sargodha, Pakistan)
Muhammad Kashif Imran (Department of Commerce, The Islamia University of Bahawalpur, Bahawalpur, Pakistan)

Kybernetes

ISSN: 0368-492X

Article publication date: 27 October 2022

Issue publication date: 2 January 2024

394

Abstract

Purpose

A paradigm shift toward a corporate model of higher educational settings has led to complex and excess work demands, yet the potential long-run ramifications of work overload are still under-examined. Building the arguments on the “spiral of resource loss” corollary of the conservation of resources (COR) theory, the authors have bridged this gap by testing how work overload spills over into career resilience via reduced harmonious passion. In addition, the authors compare how the employees having standardized workloads differ in their harmonious passion and career resilience from those having excessive (non-standardized) workloads.

Design/methodology/approach

Through a longitudinal natural field experiment of 402 faculty members [N = 198 in the standardized group (optimal load) and N = 204 in the non-standardized group (overload)] working in higher educational institutions of Pakistan, data were collected in three waves (each six months apart). The group comparison, trend analysis and longitudinal mediation analysis done through SPSS and MPlus affirmed the hypothesized associations.

Findings

The results have shown that work overload impacts career resilience through the mediating role of harmonious passion. The faculty members in the standardized workload had more passion and career resilience as compared to the non-standardized workload group. In addition, these impacts intensified overtime for the overloaded faculty members while faculty members with optimal workload sustained their passion and resilience for the teaching profession.

Originality/value

Taking the COR perspective, this study sheds light on how faculty members' work overloads reduce their capability to retain their passion and resilience for teaching from a longitudinal and experimental perspective.

Keywords

Citation

Fatima, T., Bilal, A.R., Waqas, M. and Imran, M.K. (2024), "Keeping up with this workload is difficult: the ramifications of work overload on career resilience", Kybernetes, Vol. 53 No. 1, pp. 188-215. https://doi.org/10.1108/K-01-2022-0063

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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