| dc.description.abstract | 
This study sought to address the determinants of work-family conflict among 
female teachers and how it affects their job satisfaction. The specific 
objectives of the study were to identify the determinants of work-family 
conflict; assess the differences between work-family conflict among married 
and unmarried female teachers; and examine the effect of work-family conflict 
on satisfaction of female teachers. A total of 250 respondents were used for 
the study. The lottery method of the simple random sampling was used to 
select respondents. Questionnaires were used to collect data and correlation, 
post-hoc Tukey test and regression analysis were ran. The study revealed that 
financial contributions; work overloads both at home and in school; number of 
students handled by teachers; as well as the number of family members one 
caters for determine work-family conflict among female teachers. The study 
again indicated that work-family conflict among married female teachers was 
higher than unmarried female teachers. It also emerged that there was a 
negative relationship between work-family conflict and job satisfaction of 
female teachers. It is recommended that female teachers must balance their 
loyalty to both their families and jobs; spouses, family members as well as 
supervisors must offer the needed support to female teachers to enable them 
give off their best. Again, financial pressure as well as high dependency on 
working female teachers must be reduced in order to reduce work-family 
conflict. | 
en_US |