Nathalie Schauffel, Lena Maria Kaufmann, Mona Rynek, Thomas Ellwart
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引用次数: 1
摘要
新冠肺炎大流行导致高等教育从住院教学突然转变为在线教学,导致信息和通信技术的使用增加,学生面临压力和不确定性。结合人类动机、压力和人性化工作设计的理论,我们调查了与技术压力(H1)相关的与人类(ICT能力缺陷)、技术(技术问题)、互动(协调困难)和任务方面(工作过载)有关的不同类型的行动调节障碍(ARH)。此外,我们研究了这种关系是否是通过满足人类对能力、自主性和相关性的基本需求来调节的(H2)。我们对技术压力的原因和机制的分析基于205名心理学学生的横断面调查数据(自我报告),这些学生参加了一个组织心理学课程,由于新冠肺炎大流行,该课程从住院改为在线。结构方程模型显示,不同类型的ARH(即信息和通信技术能力缺陷、技术问题、协调困难、工作过载)正预测技术压力(β = .17至β = .42,p p p = .86)。我们讨论了对在线课程规划、技术压力预防以及疫情后潜在干预措施的影响。
Technostress During COVID-19: Action Regulation Hindrances and the Mediating Role of Basic Human Needs among Psychology Students.
The COVID-19 pandemic led to an abrupt change from in-person to online teaching in higher education, resulting in increased use of information and communication technology (ICT) and students' stress and uncertainty. Integrating theories of human motivation, stress, and humane work design, we investigated whether different types of action regulation hindrances (ARH) pertaining to human (ICT competence deficits), technology (technical problems), interaction (coordination difficulties), and task aspects (work overload) related to technostress (H1). Furthermore, we examined if this relationship was mediated by satisfaction of the basic human needs for competence, autonomy, and relatedness (H2). Our analysis of causes and mechanisms of technostress is based on cross-sectional survey data (self-report) from 205 psychology students attending an organizational psychology class that was switched from an in-person to an online format due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Structural equation modeling revealed that different types of ARH (i.e., ICT competence deficits, technical problems, coordination difficulties, work overload) positively predicted technostress (β = .17 to β = .42, p < .05). The effects were (partially) mediated by satisfaction of the need for autonomy (β = .11 to β = .15, p < .05), for all ARH except technical problems (β = .01, p = .86). We discuss implications for online course planning, technostress prevention as well as potential interventions beyond pandemic times.