Ronald Downey, Ph.D.

Over the last 10 years several themes have emerged in Dr. Downey's research. Much of this work has been supported by Dr. Downey's students and colleagues. The major efforts have included: 1) part-time employment; 2) service orientation of employees; 3) work-family conflict; 4) job stress and burnout; and 5) customer contact. When possible, these efforts have over lapped. Brief descriptions of these major areas follow.

Part-time Employment: As part of a contract with a quick service restaurant chain, one of Dr. Downey's graduate students conducted a study of part-time workers. This was based on a nation-wide survey of crew members. This line of research identified the general characteristics of part-time workers and how they differed from full-time employees. One of the more important findings was that part-time workers with a greater sense of job control (e.g., scheduling of work) were more satisfied with their work and had a lower intention to leave. Several of Dr. Downey's students theses and dissertations involved part-time work and control. Dr. Downey's interests in service orientation and work-family conflict grew out of this study and were expanded in later studies.

Service Orientation of Employees: The crew survey also contained a brief set of questions related to service orientation of employees. Dr. Downey has continued working on the development of this scale. This work has demonstrated the importance of employees' perceptions of the service environment in understanding the quality of service provided by an organization. Much of the earlier work in this area was done in conjunction with students from the Institutional Management program here at K-State. More recently, this work has now been linked with the Job Burnout and Customer Contact Work being done by Dr. Downey's students.

Work-Family Conflict: Dr. Downey's efforts in this area were primarily carried out by two of his students in their dissertations. One linked work-family conflict to job satisfaction and included a large part-time sample. The second dissertation developed a new approach to work-family conflict and included the concept of family-work conflict (i.e., the degree to which work causes conflict with the family). This is clearly a critical issue in today's workforce.

Job Stress and Burnout: This is a more recent effort by Dr. Downey's students. The interest has been on understanding the antecedents and consequences of job burnout. He and his students have explicitly linked this work to a service environment and customer contact issues. Their work suggests that both traits of the workers and the state of the organization need to be considered in understanding the service environment.

Customer Contact: This has been a more recent effort and grew out of Dr. Downey's job burnout research. Customer contact has been named by many researchers as the source of job burnout, but little work has been done to empirically demonstrate this or to understand the nature of the customer contact. Preliminary work has concerned developing a better understanding of the contact and develop ways to measure it. Preliminary research has found that customer contact is a multi-faceted construct (e.g., frequency, emotional content, etc.). The various facets are directly related to different aspects of job burnout.

Dr. Downey is willing to talk to interested students about research and topic possibilities. Generally, students should have had the undergraduate Industrial Psychology course (PSYCH 560), some experience with psychological methodology, and experience with computers would be helpful. Students should contact Dr. Downey at his office in Bluemont Hall 472 or call 532-5475.