Time Management

16 Oct 2013

Time Management Scale – The Utility of ATOMS

Issues including increasing workloads, less funding, and greater diversity in the client base highlight the importance of effective time management skills in the workplace. These issues create a situation where health professionals need to achieve more in less time, making good scheduling management skills essential. Graduates, supervisors of recent graduates, experienced practitioners, and educators in the industry endorse the importance of these skills.

To that end, researchers at Sydney University investigated the most effective way of evaluating time management skills that would be suitable for an academic environment and clinical settings. They used the Australian Time Organisation and Management Scale (ATOMS) (Covic, Adamson, Lincoln & Kench, 2003).

The Time Management Evaluation

The ATOMS scale was validated on a sample of 522 subjects. Six factors were identified, all with high internal consistency (from .82-.89). The scales are Sense of Purpose, Meeting Deadlines, Mechanics of scheduling management. Effective Organisation, Propensity to Plan and Coping with Temporal Flow. The first four of these scales were used in the current study.

Student Time Management Study

In one study, 154 final year students ranging in age from 18 to 36 years completed the ATOMS. The intercorrelations between the dimensions were significant but moderate (ranging from .2-.6), indicating that they are part of the same construct, but are independent dimensions. No significant correlations appeared between the subscales and age. A modest correlation emerged between gender and Mechanisms of scheduling management. Female participants showed slightly better behavioural activities associated with time managements, such as using a diary.

Student Skills Assessment Report

A particular skills shortage appeared in the Mechanisms of Time Management area, making this the weakest area. The respondents did however on average have a strong Sense of Purpose. These results provide useful information for informing scheduling management training programs for students.

Previous studies show that management skills are critically important in employment settings. And now the current study has assessed students’  competence in time management. Findings suggest that on some dimensions they are well placed, whereas there is room for improvement on others. It also shows that the ATOMS scale is a useful and reliable measure of time management in a broad range of populations, including students.

References

Covic, T., Adamson, B.J., Lincoln, M., & Kench, P.L. (2003). Health science students’ time organization and management skills: a cross-disciplinary investigation. Medical Teacher, 25(1), 47-53.