Name File Type Size Last Modified
Analyse.ira text/plain 899 bytes 01/06/2022 12:02:AM
Descritive results - sample caracterization.xlsx application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet 157 KB 01/06/2022 12:14:AM
Exploratory factor analysis results.spv application/java-archive 12.4 KB 01/06/2022 12:00:AM
Free association Task.csv text/csv 5.2 KB 12/20/2021 03:19:AM
Free association task - responses participants.csv text/csv 78.2 KB 12/20/2021 03:19:AM
Frequencies.spv application/java-archive 19.4 KB 01/06/2022 12:33:AM
H1 results.spv application/java-archive 12.2 KB 01/06/2022 01:06:AM
H2 results.spv application/java-archive 6 KB 12/20/2021 03:19:AM
H3 results.spv application/java-archive 6 KB 01/05/2022 11:28:PM
Scored responses of different activities - discriptive statistics.spv application/java-archive 6.8 KB 01/06/2022 03:26:AM

Project Citation: 

Pires Valentim, Joaquim, and Forte, Teresa. Exploring Social Representations of Work and the Meaning of Work of Education Professionals in Mozambique. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2022-01-10. https://doi.org/10.3886/E158801V1

Project Description

Summary:  View help for Summary The changing nature of work in adaptation to socio-economic and cultural shifts has been widely addressed. The present research is aimed at identifying the Social Representations of Work (SRW) and the Meaning of Work (MOW) in education professionals settled in Mozambique. Two studies were conducted with 194 participants, including teachers, superior technicians, technical and operational assistants. In the first study a free association task and a professions classification task were employed to explore the SRW according to different socio-demographic profiles. In the second study, the influence of social justice and values on MOW dimensions was accessed through multiple regression analyses. The main findings suggest that conscientiousness and remuneration-related aspects are central to the SRW; that intellectual activities are perceived as more representative of work than manual ones by participants; and that MOW is positively associated with self-transcendence values and perception of procedural justice, but not with perception of distributive justice.



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