Perception versus Policy: Which Is More Important to Animal Welfare Volunteer Satisfaction?

There is a large body of work spanning decades examining the factors that lead to volunteer satisfaction. Much of this work has employed self-administered surveys to gather volunteers’ opinions or perceptions of factors important for satisfaction which inherently lie within the individual volunteer....

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Main Author: Laura Ann Reese
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-12-01
Series:Animals
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/14/1/95
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author Laura Ann Reese
author_facet Laura Ann Reese
author_sort Laura Ann Reese
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description There is a large body of work spanning decades examining the factors that lead to volunteer satisfaction. Much of this work has employed self-administered surveys to gather volunteers’ opinions or perceptions of factors important for satisfaction which inherently lie within the individual volunteer. Yet scholars have raised concerns about the validity of studies based on perceptions. This research builds on past work by the author by pairing a survey of animal welfare volunteers with one conducted with the executive directors of the shelters they volunteer with, addressing concerns about the validity of self-administered surveys. It concludes that perceptions appear to conform well to actual policies as described by shelter directors but that volunteer perceptions are most important for satisfaction. Volunteers whose perceptions of shelter policies differ from shelter director reports of policies are more likely to be dissatisfied with their experiences. The findings are critical to animal sheltering because they point to the importance of volunteer perceptions of shelter policies for satisfaction. To retain volunteers, animal welfare organizations need to be concerned about actual policies but also about volunteer perceptions of them.
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spelling doaj.art-797432ede44a4b6ba4628086941659cf2024-01-10T14:50:17ZengMDPI AGAnimals2076-26152023-12-011419510.3390/ani14010095Perception versus Policy: Which Is More Important to Animal Welfare Volunteer Satisfaction?Laura Ann Reese0School of Planning, Design and Construction, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USAThere is a large body of work spanning decades examining the factors that lead to volunteer satisfaction. Much of this work has employed self-administered surveys to gather volunteers’ opinions or perceptions of factors important for satisfaction which inherently lie within the individual volunteer. Yet scholars have raised concerns about the validity of studies based on perceptions. This research builds on past work by the author by pairing a survey of animal welfare volunteers with one conducted with the executive directors of the shelters they volunteer with, addressing concerns about the validity of self-administered surveys. It concludes that perceptions appear to conform well to actual policies as described by shelter directors but that volunteer perceptions are most important for satisfaction. Volunteers whose perceptions of shelter policies differ from shelter director reports of policies are more likely to be dissatisfied with their experiences. The findings are critical to animal sheltering because they point to the importance of volunteer perceptions of shelter policies for satisfaction. To retain volunteers, animal welfare organizations need to be concerned about actual policies but also about volunteer perceptions of them.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/14/1/95animal welfare volunteer satisfactionperceptual surveyscommon method biaspolicy perception versus policy
spellingShingle Laura Ann Reese
Perception versus Policy: Which Is More Important to Animal Welfare Volunteer Satisfaction?
Animals
animal welfare volunteer satisfaction
perceptual surveys
common method bias
policy perception versus policy
title Perception versus Policy: Which Is More Important to Animal Welfare Volunteer Satisfaction?
title_full Perception versus Policy: Which Is More Important to Animal Welfare Volunteer Satisfaction?
title_fullStr Perception versus Policy: Which Is More Important to Animal Welfare Volunteer Satisfaction?
title_full_unstemmed Perception versus Policy: Which Is More Important to Animal Welfare Volunteer Satisfaction?
title_short Perception versus Policy: Which Is More Important to Animal Welfare Volunteer Satisfaction?
title_sort perception versus policy which is more important to animal welfare volunteer satisfaction
topic animal welfare volunteer satisfaction
perceptual surveys
common method bias
policy perception versus policy
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/14/1/95
work_keys_str_mv AT lauraannreese perceptionversuspolicywhichismoreimportanttoanimalwelfarevolunteersatisfaction