Facilitating hotdesking in a hybrid campus environment: lessons from the hotdesking experiences of doctoral students in a US public university

IF 2.6 Q3 MANAGEMENT
M. A. Adikesavan, L. Ramasubramanian
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Abstract

Purpose University faculty, researchers and graduate students are increasingly working out of hotdesks, nonterritorial workspaces available on a “first come first served” basis and cleared of all work and personal possessions at the end of every work session. The aim of this study of the hotdesking experiences of doctoral students in a US public university facility is to identify the themes and coping behaviors associated with hotdesking and examine their implications for campus workspace design and policymaking. Design/methodology/approach This study uses multiple methods – direct and participant observation of flex workspaces in the study site, semi-structured interviews of doctoral students hotdesking in the study site and archival research of public institutional data. Findings Study participants work early or late to secure suitable hotdesks, perform important tasks in locations other than the study site, incur co-working space and home office costs, etc. to cope with the themes of uncertainty, lack of control and lack of workspace continuity associated with hotdesking. Workspace reservation systems, storage lockers and workspaces for diverse tasks can improve the on-campus hotdesking experience. Off-campus support such as financial support for setting up and maintaining a home office, subscription to co-working spaces, etc. can facilitate productivity and foster a sense of connection in hotdesk users. Originality/value This study contributes evidence that hotdesking doctoral students operate in a hybrid work environment composed of on- and off-campus locations. This study provides original insight that hotdesk users need on- and off-campus workspace support to experience productivity, connection and well-being in a hybrid campus work environment.
在混合校园环境中促进同桌办公:美国公立大学博士生同桌办公经验的教训
目的:越来越多的大学教师、研究人员和研究生在“先到先得”的基础上使用“热桌”,这是一种不分地域的工作空间,每次工作结束时都要清理掉所有的工作和个人物品。本研究以美国一所公立大学的博士生为研究对象,对他们的“办公桌轮换”经历进行了研究,目的是确定与“办公桌轮换”相关的主题和应对行为,并研究它们对校园工作空间设计和政策制定的影响。设计/方法/方法本研究采用多种方法——对研究地点的弹性工作空间进行直接和参与性观察,对研究地点的博士生进行半结构化访谈,以及对公共机构数据进行档案研究。研究结果:为了确保合适的热桌,研究参与者早晚都要工作,在研究地点以外的地方执行重要任务,承担共同工作空间和家庭办公成本等,以应对与热桌制相关的不确定性、缺乏控制和缺乏工作空间连续性等主题。工作空间预订系统、储物柜和不同任务的工作空间可以改善校园热桌制的体验。校外支持,如建立和维护家庭办公室的财政支持,订阅联合办公空间等,可以促进生产力,并在hotdesk用户中培养一种联系感。独创性/价值这项研究提供了证据,表明使用办公桌轮换制的博士生在一个由校内和校外地点组成的混合工作环境中工作。这项研究提供了原始的见解,即hotdesk用户需要校内和校外的工作空间支持,以在混合的校园工作环境中体验生产力、联系和幸福感。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
8.70%
发文量
12
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