Speaking Up and Activism Among Frontline Employees: How Professional Coping Influences Work Engagement and Intent to Leave Among Teachers

Publication date

2018-05-01

Authors

van Loon, Nina M.
Heerema, Madelon
Weggemans, Marit
Noordegraaf, M.ISNI 0000000355771032

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Demands that exceed time and resources place pressure on public professionals, resulting in coping behavior. This study aims to provide insight in the prevalence and consequences of taking a more active strategy, professional coping. Next to traditional forms of coping studied in public administration, studying active coping can result in more insight in when and with what consequences frontline employees speak up and resist pressures. We explore to what degree teachers use speaking out using professional norms as a way to tackle the pressures they face. Moreover, we analyze the relationship between professional coping, work engagement, and intent to leave as important indicators of how immersed frontline employees are in their work. Using survey data (n = 1,270) from primary school teachers, we conclude that professional coping is in general regularly but not very often applied, but that professional coping is related to higher work engagement and lower intent to leave. We conclude that studying active coping strategies can not only be important for street-level literature in gaining insight in all types of behavior and their consequences but also for public service providers aiming for an engaged workforce.

Keywords

coping, professionalism, street-level bureaucracy, work engagement, Taverne

Citation

van Loon, N M, Heerema, M, Weggemans, M & Noordegraaf, M 2018, 'Speaking Up and Activism Among Frontline Employees: How Professional Coping Influences Work Engagement and Intent to Leave Among Teachers', American Review of Public Administration, vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 318-328. https://doi.org/10.1177/0275074016682313