Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology (Apr 2024)

Mediating and Moderating Variables in the Relationship Between Emotional Demands and Teachers’ Emotional Exhaustion

  • Esther Cuadrado,
  • Mónica Jiménez-Rosa,
  • María Ruiz-García,
  • Carmen Tabernero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5093/jwop2024a3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40, no. 1
pp. 31 – 39

Abstract

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Teachers tend to suffer high levels of emotional exhaustion, a variable that is associated with poor mental health and lower job performance. The present study analyzed how emotional demands, emotional dissonance, and self-efficacy to cope with stress interact in predicting teachers’ emotional exhaustion. To conduct this longitudinal research, 108 Andalusian teachers (57.3% women; mean age = 45.30, SD = 8.68) completed an online survey at three different time points. Moderated mediation analysis suggested that emotional dissonance mediated the relationship between emotional demands and emotional exhaustion, with self-efficacy acting as a moderator between the two. Teachers who perceived high emotional demands saw their levels of emotional dissonance increase, which in turn led to an increase in emotional exhaustion. In addition, self-efficacy acted as a protective factor against emotional exhaustion, buffering the negative effect of emotional dissonance. Strengthening these protective variables through interventions that increase levels of self-efficacy to cope with stress and reduce levels of emotional dissonance could help prevent teachers’ emotional exhaustion.

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