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We gratefully acknowledge the assistance and the contribution to this manuscript provided by three anonymous ASQ reviewers and the associate editor. The implementation of an experimental flexible-scheduling program was the basis for a naturally occurring field experiment. A six-year assessment tests the effects of a flexible-scheduling program on absenteeism and turnover for the division implementing the program as well as a comparable control group. Results indicate gross reductions in employee absenteeism after the flexible-scheduling intervention for the experimental group, while no such changes were evident in the control group. The twoyear period after the program ended indicates that absenteeism immediately returned to base-rate levels. The rate of employee turnover, however, was unaffected by the intervention. The concluding section discusses the problems encountered in trying to apply flexible scheduling to a large-scale organization.s
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Dan R. Dalton
CARE Canada
Debra J. Mesch
Northeastern University
Administrative Science Quarterly
Indiana University
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Dalton et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0fee7c8090e499da605ee6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/2393395