This study links and tests three strands of theory concerned with explaining individual differences in levels of professional burnout in general and among religious professionals in particular. These three strands concern the significance of current self-esteem, recalled self-esteem as a child, and personality. Data were provided by a sample of 1,278 male stipendiary parochial clergy working in the Church of England who completed the modified Maslach Burnout Inventory (specially designed for use among clergy), and the short-form Revised Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (designed to measure the personality dimensions of extraversion, neuroticism and psychoticism), together with a semantic differential index of recalled self-esteem as a chil...
Drawing on data provided by 287 Catholic priests, religious brothers, and religious sisters from dif...
This study targeted pastoral burnout symptomology and its relationship to self-perceived leadership ...
A major consequence of changing cultures for Anglican clergy serving in the established Church of En...
ABSTRACT OF GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH Dissertation Andrews University School of Education Title: A C...
This study set out to examine three questions regarding the prevalence and correlates of burnout amo...
This study assesses the Oswald Clergy Burnout Scale (OCBI), the psychometric properties of which hav...
Pressures generated by increasing secularization and decreasing vocations to ordained ministry are r...
Drawing on the classic model of balanced affect, the Francis Burnout Inventory (FBI) conceptualises ...
Poor work-related psychological health and professional burnout remain issues of concern among clerg...
Drawing on the classic model of balanced affect, the Francis Burnout Inventory (FBI) conceptualised ...
The present study draws on data generated by the Church Growth Research Programme among 1,268 full-t...
This paper explores the connection between psychological type and burnout among a sample of 155 Cath...
The present study draws on data generated by the Church Growth Research Programme among 1,268 full-t...
Drawing on data provided by 803 Methodist circuit ministers serving in Great Britain, the present st...
research articleThe present study examined to which degree reformed ministers suffer from burnout sy...
Drawing on data provided by 287 Catholic priests, religious brothers, and religious sisters from dif...
This study targeted pastoral burnout symptomology and its relationship to self-perceived leadership ...
A major consequence of changing cultures for Anglican clergy serving in the established Church of En...
ABSTRACT OF GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH Dissertation Andrews University School of Education Title: A C...
This study set out to examine three questions regarding the prevalence and correlates of burnout amo...
This study assesses the Oswald Clergy Burnout Scale (OCBI), the psychometric properties of which hav...
Pressures generated by increasing secularization and decreasing vocations to ordained ministry are r...
Drawing on the classic model of balanced affect, the Francis Burnout Inventory (FBI) conceptualises ...
Poor work-related psychological health and professional burnout remain issues of concern among clerg...
Drawing on the classic model of balanced affect, the Francis Burnout Inventory (FBI) conceptualised ...
The present study draws on data generated by the Church Growth Research Programme among 1,268 full-t...
This paper explores the connection between psychological type and burnout among a sample of 155 Cath...
The present study draws on data generated by the Church Growth Research Programme among 1,268 full-t...
Drawing on data provided by 803 Methodist circuit ministers serving in Great Britain, the present st...
research articleThe present study examined to which degree reformed ministers suffer from burnout sy...
Drawing on data provided by 287 Catholic priests, religious brothers, and religious sisters from dif...
This study targeted pastoral burnout symptomology and its relationship to self-perceived leadership ...
A major consequence of changing cultures for Anglican clergy serving in the established Church of En...