# Resilience and Work Stress in Educational Institutions of Chepén, 2024: Mediation of Motivation and Time Moderation

**Authors:** Abigail Silvia Jara Cerdan, Rosa Jackeline Medina Sanchez, Marco Agustín Arbulú Ballesteros

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs15070888 · 2025-06-30

## TL;DR

This study explores how resilience affects work stress in Peruvian teachers, finding that motivation mediates this relationship.

## Contribution

The study identifies work motivation as a mediator between resilience and work stress, with no moderating role of years of service.

## Key findings

- Resilience significantly predicts work motivation (β = 0.413, p < 0.001).
- Work motivation significantly reduces work stress (β = 0.335, p = 0.0401).
- Years of service and resilience do not directly or moderately affect work stress.

## Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between resilience and work-related stress among secondary school teachers in Chepén, Peru, during 2024, with a focus on (a) the mediating role of work motivation and (b) the moderating effect of years of service. Using a non-experimental quantitative design, data were collected from 450 teachers and analyzed in SPSS 27 with Hayes’ PROCESS 4.3 macro. Results showed that resilience significantly predicted motivation (β = 0.413, p < 0.001), accounting for 35% of its variance (R2 = 0.35). In turn, motivation was significantly and negatively associated with work stress (β = 0.335, p = 0.0401), explaining 20% of the variance in stress levels (R2 = 0.20). Neither resilience (β = 0.187, p = 0.5420) nor years of service (β = 0.217, p = 0.9003), nor their interaction (β = 0.002, p = 0.8144) had a direct or moderating effect on work stress. Descriptive analyses indicated that most teachers exhibited moderate levels of resilience (51.1%), stress (42.2%), and motivation (37.8%). These findings underscore that resilience alone does not reduce work stress; its stress-buffering effect operates through enhanced motivation. Educational interventions should therefore target both resilience-building and motivational strategies to effectively diminish teacher stress and promote occupational well-being.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** injury to (MESH:D014947), chronic fatigue (MESH:D015673), fatigue (MESH:D005221), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382), SDT (MESH:D003643), burnout (MESH:D002055), ill-health (MESH:D000071069)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12292708/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12292708