4.6 Article

Researchers working from home: Benefits and challenges

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249127

Keywords

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Funding

  1. research program Sustainable Cooperation -Roadmaps to Resilient Societies (SCOOP)
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  3. Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science (OCW) [024.003.025]

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The recent pandemic has brought into focus the pros and cons of working from home for academics, with varying efficiency levels reported among researchers. While some find themselves more efficient at home, others prefer the office environment for certain tasks. An increasing number of researchers express a desire to work more from home in the future for better work-life balance.
The flexibility allowed by the mobilization of technology disintegrated the traditional work-life boundary for most professionals. Whether working from home is the key or impediment to academics' efficiency and work-life balance became a daunting question for both scientists and their employers. The recent pandemic brought into focus the merits and challenges of working from home on a level of personal experience. Using a convenient sampling, we surveyed 704 academics while working from home and found that the pandemic lockdown decreased the work efficiency for almost half of the researchers but around a quarter of them were more efficient during this time compared to the time before. Based on the gathered personal experience, 70% of the researchers think that in the future they would be similarly or more efficient than before if they could spend more of their work-time at home. They indicated that in the office they are better at sharing thoughts with colleagues, keeping in touch with their team, and collecting data, whereas at home they are better at working on their manuscript, reading the literature, and analyzing their data. Taking well-being also into account, 66% of them would find it ideal to work more from home in the future than they did before the lockdown. These results draw attention to how working from home is becoming a major element of researchers' life and that we have to learn more about its influencer factors and coping tactics in order to optimize its arrangements.

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