| Literature DB >> 32318001 |
Xin Zheng1,2, Xiao Shi2, Yuan Liu3.
Abstract
Emotional labor plays an essential role in school leadership and teaching, as principals and teachers undergo complex interactions with students, colleagues, and parents. Although researchers have realized the influence of leaders' behaviors on followers' emotions in management and educational contexts, the relationship between leadership behaviors, teachers' emotional labor, and related organizational outcomes has been underexplored. As leadership and emotional labor are situated and influenced by cultural contexts, the current study focused on the relationship between teachers' emotional labor strategies, multidimensional teacher commitment, and paternalistic leadership, a unique leadership type rooted in Confucianism. Paternalistic leadership is a style that combines strong authority with fatherly benevolence, which is prevalent in East Asia and the Middle East. A sample of 419 teachers was randomly selected to participate in a survey. The results showed that principals' authoritarian leadership behaviors had negative influences on teachers' commitment to the profession and commitment to the school. Benevolent leadership had positive effects on teachers' commitment to students, commitment to the profession, and commitment to the school. Teachers' deep acting played positive mediating effects, while surface acting was a negative mediator. The results imply that school leaders could properly exert parent-like leadership practices to facilitate teacher commitment through managing teachers' emotions.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese contexts; emotional labor; mediation analysis; paternalistic leadership; teacher commitment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32318001 PMCID: PMC7147470 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Descriptive statistics, Cronbach’s α, and correlation matrix.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
| 1. AL | − | − | − | − | − | − | − |
| 2. BL | −0.35*** | − | − | − | − | − | − |
| 3. DA | −0.15** | 0.39*** | − | − | − | − | − |
| 4. SA | 0.38*** | −0.26*** | 0.11* | − | − | − | − |
| 5. CSC | −0.38*** | 0.65*** | 0.38*** | −0.24*** | − | − | − |
| 6. CST | −0.30*** | 0.57*** | 0.38*** | −0.25*** | 0.78*** | − | − |
| 7. CP | −0.35*** | 0.53*** | 0.31*** | −0.16*** | 0.66*** | 0.62*** | − |
| 2.75 | 5.32 | 4.13 | 2.33 | 4.76 | 4.83 | 4.63 | |
| 1.23 | 0.93 | 0.82 | 1.08 | 0.45 | 0.37 | 0.57 | |
| Cronbach’s | 0.75 | 0.80 | 0.70 | 0.85 | 0.86 | 0.87 | 0.76 |
FIGURE 1Mediating effect of emotional labor on the effects of paternalistic leadership on teacher commitment. ∗∗∗p < 0.001, ∗∗p < 0.01, *p < 0.05, ns, not significant. Dotted lines indicate non-significant paths.
Mediation analysis of emotional labor on the effects of paternalistic leadership on teacher commitment.
| Mediation analysis | ||||||
| 95% CI | ||||||
| Dependent variable | Independent variable | Mediation variable | Estimates (SE) | Lower | Upper | |
| CSS | AL | SA | −0.10(0.02) | 0.000 | [−0.12, −0.07] | |
| DA | 0.07(0.03) | 0.008 | [0.02, 0.11] | |||
| BL | SA | −0.02(0.02) | 0.119 | [−0.04, 00] | ||
| DA | 0.23(0.03) | 0.000 | [0.19, 0.28] | |||
| CST | AL | SA | −0.17(0.03) | 0.000 | [−0.22, −0.13] | |
| DA | 0.08(0.03) | 0.004 | [0.04, 0.13] | |||
| BL | SA | −0.03(0.02) | 0.126 | [−0.07, 00] | ||
| DA | 0.26(0.05) | 0.000 | [0.19, 0.35] | |||
| CP | AL | SA | −0.03(0.01) | 0.000 | [−0.04, −0.02] | |
| DA | 0.07(0.02) | 0.000 | [0.04, 0.11] | |||
| BL | SA | −0.01(0.00) | 0.111 | [−0.01, 0.00] | ||
| DA | 0.25(0.03) | 0.000 | [0.19, 0.30] | |||