A survey of students enrolled in the post-practicum years of the Property and Construction degree course at the University of Melbourne was undertaken. Students reported working more hours in paid work each week than they spent at university. A measure of burnout designed for use in student samples was tested and found to possess good discriminant validity and internal consistency reliability in the Australian context. The property and construction students were found to have very high levels of burnout compared to professional samples. Future research is needed to identify the causes and consequences of student burnout. The students' time involvement in paid work was inversely related to their time involvement in university. However, ...
Work-life conflict is a form of inter-role conflict that arises by reason of simultaneous occurrence...
To meet the increasing demands of professional as well as private life, maintaining an optimum work ...
There is growing concern surrounding the detrimental effect of term-time employment on university st...
A survey of students enrolled in the post-practicum years of the Property and Construction degree co...
A questionnaire survey was undertaken among third year studentsenrolled in the University of Melbour...
A questionnaire survey was undertaken among third year students enrolled in the University of Melbou...
Excessive work demands cause students to have less time available for study, which results in them m...
The cost of accessing higher education is expensive causing students to juggle the demands of paid w...
The present study aimed to examine the effects that work has on full-time university students in an ...
The cost of accessing higher education is expensive causing students to juggle the demands of paid w...
Many construction management students work in industry both before and during their formal tertiary ...
Burnout is caused from prolonged stress, which can result in physical and emotional exhaustion. This...
Burnout, engagement, and organisational justice concepts are usually studied in the context of labou...
The recent phenomenon that high numbers of full-time students in the UK participate in term time pai...
This study examines burnout and engagement—the hypothesized opposite of burnout—in university stu
Work-life conflict is a form of inter-role conflict that arises by reason of simultaneous occurrence...
To meet the increasing demands of professional as well as private life, maintaining an optimum work ...
There is growing concern surrounding the detrimental effect of term-time employment on university st...
A survey of students enrolled in the post-practicum years of the Property and Construction degree co...
A questionnaire survey was undertaken among third year studentsenrolled in the University of Melbour...
A questionnaire survey was undertaken among third year students enrolled in the University of Melbou...
Excessive work demands cause students to have less time available for study, which results in them m...
The cost of accessing higher education is expensive causing students to juggle the demands of paid w...
The present study aimed to examine the effects that work has on full-time university students in an ...
The cost of accessing higher education is expensive causing students to juggle the demands of paid w...
Many construction management students work in industry both before and during their formal tertiary ...
Burnout is caused from prolonged stress, which can result in physical and emotional exhaustion. This...
Burnout, engagement, and organisational justice concepts are usually studied in the context of labou...
The recent phenomenon that high numbers of full-time students in the UK participate in term time pai...
This study examines burnout and engagement—the hypothesized opposite of burnout—in university stu
Work-life conflict is a form of inter-role conflict that arises by reason of simultaneous occurrence...
To meet the increasing demands of professional as well as private life, maintaining an optimum work ...
There is growing concern surrounding the detrimental effect of term-time employment on university st...