While telecommuting is becoming increasingly
widespread, very little is known about how
telecommuters differ from traditional office
employees in their work related attitudes. The
empirical literature to date has been wrought with
definitional and methodological flaws, severely
hindering the ability to draw any definitive
conclusions. This study attempts to control for many
of the confounds inherent in the literature (e.g.,
low power, poorly constructed samples), and adds an
important methodological improvement.
This will be the first known study to investigate
measurement equivalence across telecommuters and
non-telecommuters prior to mean difference
interpretation. Given the improvements in
experimental design (superior sample construction,
more rigorous analysis), this book is an important
contribution to the existing literature.
widespread, very little is known about how
telecommuters differ from traditional office
employees in their work related attitudes. The
empirical literature to date has been wrought with
definitional and methodological flaws, severely
hindering the ability to draw any definitive
conclusions. This study attempts to control for many
of the confounds inherent in the literature (e.g.,
low power, poorly constructed samples), and adds an
important methodological improvement.
This will be the first known study to investigate
measurement equivalence across telecommuters and
non-telecommuters prior to mean difference
interpretation. Given the improvements in
experimental design (superior sample construction,
more rigorous analysis), this book is an important
contribution to the existing literature.