Impact of HRM Practices on University Teachers’ Burnout: Exploring the Mediating Role of Organizational Climate

Authors

  • Imsha Rana PhD Scholar, Department of Advanced Studies in Education IER, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan. Author
  • Muhammad Shafi Malik PhD Scholar, Department of Educational Sciences, National University of Modern Languages Islamabad Pakistan Author
  • Faiqa Naaz PhD Scholar, Department of Advanced Studies in Education IER, University of the Punjab Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan. Author
  • Khizra Naseer PhD Scholar, Department of Advanced Studies in Education IER, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v3i3.628

Keywords:

HRM, Practices, Burnout, Organizational Climate, Mediation, Faculty

Abstract

This study investigated the impact of human resource management (HRM) practices on university  teachers’ burnout, with organizational climate serving as a mediating variable. The research contributes  from theoretical, managerial, academic, and practical perspectives. A quantitative approach and causal comparative research design were employed. Data were collected through a cross-sectional survey,  providing numerical descriptions of the study variables. The study was delimited to teachers from two  universities in Lahore, one public and the other private. Specifically, faculty members from the  University of Education and Superior University constituted the population. At the first stage,  purposive sampling was used to select one public and one private university, after which stratified  proportionate sampling identified four departments from each institution. The research instrument was  pilot-tested to ensure validity and reliability. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and 
inferential techniques, including independent-samples t-tests, one-way ANOVA, correlation, and linear  regression. The findings revealed significant positive relationships among the key constructs.  Regression analysis indicated that HRM practices significantly reduced faculty burnout while  enhancing organizational climate. Furthermore, organizational climate itself showed a strong positive  association with burnout. Gender-based differences were identified through the t-test, with male faculty  reporting slightly stronger perceptions than female faculty. However, results from the one-way  ANOVA showed no significant differences in HRM practices or burnout across demographic variables  such as age, department, institutional type, or academic qualifications when organizational climate was  considered as a mediator. 

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Published

2025-09-30