Can Online MBA Programs Allow Professional Working Mothers to Balance Work, Family, and Career Progression? A Case Study in China
Mboni Kibelloh, Yukun Bao

TL;DR
This study explores how online MBA programs can help Chinese working mothers balance work, family, and career growth, highlighting benefits and challenges through qualitative interviews.
Contribution
It provides insights into perceptions of online MBA effectiveness for working mothers in China, emphasizing policy and practice improvements.
Findings
Online MBA offers flexible scheduling for working mothers.
Work-family conflicts hinder study engagement.
Motivation, networking, and interaction issues need addressing.
Abstract
Career progression is a general concern of professional working mothers in China. The purpose of this paper is to report a qualitative study of Chinese professional working mothers that explored the perceptions of online Master's of Business Administration (MBA) programmes as a tool for career progression for working mothers balancing work and family in China. The objective was to examine existing work-family and career progression conflicts, the perceived usefulness of online MBA in balancing work-family and career aspirations, and the perceived ease of use of e-learning. Using Davis's (1989) technology acceptance model (TAM), the research drew on in-depth interviews with 10 female part-time MBA students from a university in Wuhan. The data were analysed through coding and transcribing. The findings showed that conflicts arose where demanding work schedules competed with family…
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