Academic Journal

Islamic music listening, spiritual well-being and burnout of employees in Islamic university: Mendengar musik Islam, kesejahteraan rohani dan kelelahan dalam kalangan pekerja di universiti Islam

Bibliographic Details
Title: Islamic music listening, spiritual well-being and burnout of employees in Islamic university: Mendengar musik Islam, kesejahteraan rohani dan kelelahan dalam kalangan pekerja di universiti Islam
Authors: Nurasikin Mohamad Shariff, Nor Atiqah Azhar, Siti Nurbayani Abu Bakar, Azmir Ahmad, Mohd Arifin Kaderi, Sanisah Saidi
Source: al-Irsyad: Journal of Islamic and Contemporary Issues; Vol. 7 No. 2 (2022): al-Irsyad: Journal of Islamic and Contemporary Issues; 915-923
Publisher Information: Penerbit Kolej Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Selangor, 2022.
Publication Year: 2022
Subject Terms: Religiosity, 4. Education, Burnout, Islamic Music, 10. No inequality, 16. Peace & justice, Spiritual Well-Being, 3. Good health
Description: In Malaysia, working in a university with Islamic vibes that boost spiritual well-being and reduce burnout needs to be supported with empirical evidence. The aim of the study is to examine the relationship between listening to Islamic music, spiritual well-being, and burnout among employees of public universities. A cross-sectional study using an online survey was conducted among 140 employees in a public university during the Covid-19 movement control order in Malaysia (April to May 2021). The set of questionnaires includes socio-demographic data, the types and frequency of music listened by the employees, Modified Maslach Inventory Burnout (MBI), the Duke University Religion Index (DUREL) and spiritual well-being (SWB). The data was analysed using SPSS version 26.0, and hypotheses were tested using the Mann-Whitney U test, Kruskal Wallis and Spearman correlation. The majority of employees listened to music every day, and 51.4% of study participants listened to Islamic music or audio. The study participants have a high level of religiosity (DUREL Mean = 24.02, SD=±2.352), high spiritual well-being (SWB) (Mean= 109.84, SD=±9.014). For the burnout category, there was a low level of depersonalization (Mean= 8.54, SD=±5.728), moderate emotional exhaustion (Mean=20.51, SD=±9.866), and high personal accomplishment (Mean=31.87, SD=±7.956) among employees. SWB correlates positively with personal accomplishment and negatively with emotional exhaustion and depersonalisation (p
Document Type: Article
File Description: application/pdf
ISSN: 2550-1992
0128-116X
DOI: 10.53840/alirsyad.v7i2.320
Access URL: https://al-irsyad.uis.edu.my/index.php/alirsyad/article/view/320
Rights: CC BY NC
Accession Number: edsair.doi.dedup.....8ab19d76a422d1014c7687360ab7d94c
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
ISSN:25501992
0128116X
DOI:10.53840/alirsyad.v7i2.320