Strategies for Managing Work/Family/Personal Life
by Extension Employees and Their Families/Friends
Managing multiple roles day in and day out
is challenging. Respondents to the study,
"Work/Life Issues" ¹ share strategies they
are using to manage their work/family/personal life.
Scheduling
Calendar scheduling is the most used
strategy by program staff and administrators.
Employee respondents say they use one
calendar for scheduling work, family, and
personal dates. Many respondents refer to
this as "creative scheduling."
Blocking time for annual leave (vacation) is
important, too. "Veteran" employees (those
with 20 or more years of service) are
emphatic about getting annual leave on the
calendar. One respondent comments, "Annual
leave goes on the calendar first and I
work around it for programming."
Respondents offer tips they use to make
calendar scheduling work:
* Schedule all of annual leave - even
if some of it is in half day increments.
* Before scheduling events ask,
"Does this matter? Is it realistic? Can it be
delegated?"
*Limit evening meetings/events to 1-2 per week; limit weekend events to 1-2 per
month.
* Plan several meetings for the same
time ("piggyback"). Float among them. * Use a highlighter pen on family
dates and events, or write them in ink, so as
not to double schedule.
Extension employee family member/friend
respondents also list scheduling as
important.
"Coordinate" is the key word. They mention
keeping detailed calendars of arrangements
and times and that they, "communicate,
communicate, communicate."
Combining Work and Family
Extension employee respondents, especially
veteran and "new" (those with five or less
years of Extension employment), say
combining work and family is a frequently
used strategy. Specifically, this could
involve the employee, spouse, and children
setting up a meeting room, registering
participants, handing out materials, and
cleaning up after the event. More often,
employees involve their spouse and/or
family in work-related travel, ranging from
day trips to longer conferences.
This strategy is used by the Extension family
member/friend respondents, too, but much
less frequently. In some instances, it's used
out of frustration. As one respondent says, "
Our family helps with work meetings just so
we can have some time together."
Working Flexible Hours
Some degree of flextime is a strategy used
by employee respondents including program
staff, administrators, and support staff. Some
say they feel guilty using flextime because
there is no formal policy in place. However,
one group that doesn't mention guilt is the
veteran program staff. They most often list
this strategy, whether it's using
compensatory time, working at home,
coming to work late after an evening event
the night before, or "leaving when I need
to."
New program staff and support staff most
often list working part-time as their flexible
work strategy. Support staff use reciprocity
more than other employees ( they "cover"
for each other when one person is gone) and
say it contributes to a "teamwork" concept.
One group of program staff uses the strategy
of either working at home or going back to
the office after the rest of the family has
gone to bed. Only program staff with six to
19 years experience mention this practice.
Setting Boundaries
"Leave work at work" is a strategy common
to all employees and their family
members/friends. Some respondents mean it
literally and some refer to it as a mental
strategy.
Saying "NO" is another strategy all
employee respondents use. New program
staff and support staff say they want to learn
more ways to say it graciously. According
to a new employee, "Saying no is a way to
be honest with people. At my kids' ball
game I say 'I'm not on the job now, please
contact me....'."
Other employees use their home answering
machine to screen evening and weekend
calls. One veteran employee uses the
message, "Please call my office during work
hours about work matters..."
Making Family First
Making family priority #1 is another strategy
common to all employee respondents and
their family member/friends. "Weekends
are reserved for family and friends," echoes
every respondent category.
Other family centered strategies include:
*Eat meals at unusual hours so the
family can be together.
*Share household tasks and child
care.
*Videotape missed children's events,
then watch tape together as a family.
* Participate as a family in
church/spiritual and other social, non-work
organizations.
*Communicate, communicate,
communicate.
Making It Personal
Respondents in all groups (program,
administration, support as well as family
members/friends) make it a personal responsibility
to use individual strategies.
Strategies to prevent/reduce personal stress
include: exercise, gardening, yard work,
relaxing, and taking breaks.
To reduce family stress, respondents
mention: hire a great child care provider,
communicate support to each other (respect,
love, understanding, and cooperation),
call home when gone overnight, schedule
weekly lunch date with spouse, eat out on
Fridays, hire house cleaned on Fridays, let
extended family help when they offer.
Other personal strategies include: keep a
positive attitude, be organized but flexible
(always have a plan B, make lists, do things
the night before), be kind and courteous.
It's Frustrating
"We (I) have no strategies..." is a concern of
some employee respondents. However,
family member/friend respondents express
many frustrations in trying to manage
work/family and personal life. "Work is
first, and everything else is a poor second,"
sums up many of the comments.
¹ Work/Life Issues of Extension
Employees and Their Families/Friends. A
national research project conducted by Ohio
State University Extension in partnership
with Joint Council of Extension
Professionals, 1997.
Written by: Jan Thompson, Leader,
Work/Life/Health Issues, Family and
Consumer Sciences, Ohio State University
Extension, 4/98.
Go to Work/Life