4.4 Article

Longitudinal Effects of Emotional Labour on Emotional Exhaustion and Dedication of Teachers

Journal

JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 494-504

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0021046

Keywords

emotional labor; emotional exhaustion; dedication; teachers; longitudinal study

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A great number of teachers find teaching fulfilling and are dedicated to it, but others feel emotionally exhausted, indicating that the interaction with pupils can be emotionally demanding. Emotional labor was shown to play an important role for the health of teachers. In a full two-wave longitudinal study over the period of I year, the effect of emotional labor on emotional exhaustion and dedication of 102 teachers was investigated. Teachers who were able to influence their emotions to feel the emotion appropriate in a situation (so called deep acting) felt significantly less emotionally exhausted after 1 year. From this result, deep acting can, thus, be characterized as health-beneficial. Once teachers felt emotionally exhausted, they used more surface acting. More dedicated teachers, on the contrary, did neither engage more in deep acting nor in surface acting at Time 2. This indicates that those teachers who are dedicated to teaching seem less likely to act. To prevent emotional exhaustion of teachers, the development of interventions to promote health-beneficial emotional labor is necessary. This can be achieved by fostering deep acting, which reduces emotional exhaustion over longer periods of time.

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