how often is there a great deal to be done? responses for items 5 to 11 are obtained on a 5-point likert-type scale where 1 = hardly any, 2…

CITM_93834f23309b · 1 source instrument · 1 surface variant

Normalized stem

how often is there a great deal to be done? responses for items 5 to 11 are obtained on a 5-point likert-type scale where 1 = hardly any, 2 =a little, 3 =some,4=a lot, and 5 =a great deal. how much slowdown in the workload do you experience? how much time do you have to think and contemplate? how much workload do you have? what quantity of work do others expect you to do? how much time do you have to do all your work? how many projects, assignments, or tasks do you have? ksh omiadn a—r how many lulls between heavy workload periods do you have?

Normalization rule (PRN-050): lowercase, strip non-word/space punctuation, collapse whitespace, trim. Used for fast dedup matching across the instrument corpus.

Normative benchmark

No normative benchmark yet for this item. Item-level norms require per-respondent response distributions; they populate from published norms where available and sharpen as anonymized, aggregated deployment responses are contributed (the benchmark flywheel).

Surface variants

The verbatim item text as it appeared in each source instrument. Cross-instrument variation is preserved here; the normalized form above is the dedup key.

  1. How often is there a great deal to be done? Responses for items 5 to 11 are obtained on a 5-point Likert-type scale where 1 = hardly any, 2 =a little, 3 =some,4=a lot, and 5 =a great deal. How much slowdown in the workload do you experience? How much time do you have to think and contemplate? How much workload do you have? What quantity of work do others expect you to do? How much time do you have to do all your work? How many projects, assignments, or tasks do you have? KSH oMIADN a—r How many lulls between heavy workload periods do you have?

Appears in

Job Overload

INST_4acbb6092191

How often is there a great deal to be done? Responses for items 5 to 11 are obtained on a 5-point Likert-type scale where 1 = hardly any, 2 =a little, 3 =some,4=a lot, and 5 =a great deal. How much slowdown in the workload do you experience? How much time do you have to think and contemplate? How much workload do you have? What quantity of work do others expect you to do? How much time do you have to do all your work? How many projects, assignments, or tasks do you have? KSH oMIADN a—r How many lulls between heavy workload periods do you have?

Programmatic access: this row is also available via the registry REST surface at /api/v1/items/CITM_93834f23309b and via the MCP gateway as principia.items.lookup.