Search results for "organizational behavior"

showing 10 items of 758 documents

Organizational justice, sickness absence and employee age

2013

Purpose – The aim of this paper is to study age-related differences in how perceptions of two forms of organizational justice, i.e. procedural and interactional justice, are related to short (i.e. non-certified) spells and long (i.e. medically certified) spells of sickness absence. Design/methodology/approach – The authors conducted a study on a large sample of Finnish public sector employees (n=37,324), in which they matched employees' 2004 survey data with their records-based sick absences in 2005 and 2006. Findings – The results suggest that age moderates the association between perceptions of procedural justice and long sickness absences after controlling for gender, tenure, occupationa…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSocial PsychologySocioemotional selectivity theorybusiness.industryPublic sectorProcedural justiceManagement Science and Operations ResearchJob performanceInteractional justiceOrganizational justiceAbsenteeismSurvey data collectionbusinessPsychologySocial psychologyApplied PsychologyClinical psychologyJournal of Managerial Psychology
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Integrating theory and practice? Employees’ and students’ experiences of learning at work

2003

The integration of theory and practice has been recognised as one of the key questions in the development of professional expertise and vocational competence. In this study the question of how theory and practice meet each other during professional development was approached from the point of view of two different groups of learners: employees with varying length of work experience and university students taking a working life project course. Altogether 18 employees and 51 students were interviewed, after which transcribed interviews were qualitatively categorised. The opinions expressed by the informants indicate that work‐based learning is not a unified phenomenon but varies in different …

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSocial PsychologyTacit knowledgeVocational educationPhenomenonProfessional developmentPedagogyDevelopmentPsychologyCompetence (human resources)Work experienceProfessional expertiseLearning at workJournal of Workplace Learning
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Experience, competence and workplace learning

2006

PurposeThis paper aims to examine employees' conceptions of the meaning of experience in job‐competence and its development in workplace context. The aim is to bring out the variety of conceptions related to experience, competence and workplace learning.Design/methodology/approachThe paper is based on interview data from six Finnish small and medium sized enterprises. The data were collected as a part of a larger European Union research project, Working Life Changes and Training of Older Workers (WORKTOW) during spring 1999. The approach chosen for the analysis presented in this paper was phenomenography.FindingsThe findings in the paper show the importance accorded to experience in compete…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSocial Psychologybusiness.industryDevelopmentPublic relationsSocial engagementWork experienceInterview dataWorkplace learningTacit knowledgePedagogymedia_common.cataloged_instanceEuropean unionOn-the-job trainingPsychologybusinessCompetence (human resources)media_commonJournal of Workplace Learning
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El viaje desde los cuestionarios Likert a los cuestionarios de elección forzosa: evidencia de la invarianza de los parámetros de los ítems

2019

Multidimensional forced-choice questionnaires are widely regarded in the personnel selection literature for their ability to control response biases. Recently developed IRT models usually rely on the assumption that item parameters remain invariant when they are paired in forced-choice blocks, without giving it much consideration. This study aims to test this assumption empirically on the MUPP-2PL model, comparing the parameter estimates of the forced-choice format to their graded-scale equivalent on a Big Five personality instrument. The assumption was found to hold reasonably well, especially for the discrimination parameters. In the cases in which it was violated, we briefly discuss the …

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSocial Psychologylcsh:BF1-990IRTMUPPPersonnel selectionCuestionarios de elección forzosaLikert scaleMUPP-2PL0504 sociologyLikelihood Ratio test0502 economics and businessEconometricsBig Five personality traitsPractical implicationsInvarianzaForced2PLTwo-alternative forced choiceInvariance05 social sciences050401 social sciences methodsInvariant (physics)Psicologíalcsh:PsychologyTest de razón de verosimilitudesForced-choice questionnairesPsychology050203 business & management
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Emotions in leaders’ enactment of professional agency

2019

Purpose Although there has been an increase in workplace studies on professional agency, few of these have examined the role of emotions in the enactment of agency at work. To date, professional agency has been mainly conceptualised as a goal-oriented, rational activity aimed at influencing a current state of affairs. Challenged by this, this study aims to elaborate the nature and quality of emotions and how they might be connected to the enactment of professional agency. Design/methodology/approach Data are collected in the context of a leadership coaching programme that aimed to promote the leaders’ professional agency over the course of a year. The participants (11 middle-management lea…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPsychological interventionIdentity (social science)State of affairsContext (language use)DevelopmentpäällikötCoachingtunteet0502 economics and businessAgency (sociology)Quality (business)media_commonbusiness.industry05 social sciences050301 educationtoimijuusPublic relationsWork (electrical)agencybusinessPsychology0503 education050203 business & managementjohtajat
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The Art of Pacifying an Aggressive Client: ‘Feminine’ Skills and Preventing Violence in Caring Work

2007

This article explores the complex interconnection between gender and emotion in the context of client-perpetrated violence at work, focusing on interviews with and writings by Finnish nurses and social workers to discuss the ‘feminine’ emotional skills that are supposed to prevent violence. The social formation of these skills is analysed with the concept ‘emotional habitus’: emotional skills derive from the socially acquired disposition to manage emotions according to the gendered values of caring work. Emotional habitus, based on the internalized, second-nature sense of emotional management, is shown to both persuade and enable employees to use emotional skills as assets for negotiating v…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSocial workmedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlContext (language use)Emotional competenceGender StudiesNegotiationAgency (sociology)HabitusEmotional exhaustionPsychologySocial psychologymedia_commonGender, Work & Organization
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The long arm of email incivility: Transmitted stress to the partner and partner work withdrawal

2018

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSociology and Political Science05 social sciences050109 social psychologyLong armIncivilityWork (electrical)0502 economics and businessStress (linguistics)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologySocial psychology050203 business & managementGeneral PsychologyApplied PsychologyJournal of Organizational Behavior
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Does job insecurity threaten who you are? Introducing a social identity perspective to explain well-being and performance consequences of job insecur…

2017

Summary This paper introduces a social identity perspective to job insecurity research. Worrying about becoming jobless, we argue, is detrimental because it implies an anticipated membership of a negatively evaluated group—the group of unemployed people. Job insecurity hence threatens a person's social identity as an employed person. This in turn will affect well-being and job performance. A three-wave survey study amongst 377 British employees supports this perspective. Persons who felt higher levels of job insecurity were more likely to report a weaker social identity as an employed person. This effect was found to be stable over time and also held against a test of reverse causality. Fur…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSociology and Political Science05 social sciencesPerspective (graphical)Job design050109 social psychologyJob attitudeProactivityJob performance0502 economics and businessWell-being0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesJob satisfactionSocial identity theoryPsychologySocial psychology050203 business & managementGeneral PsychologyApplied PsychologyJournal of Organizational Behavior
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Will COVID-19 Have Long-Lasting Effects on Inequality? Evidence from Past Pandemics

2022

This paper provides evidence on the impact of major epidemics from the past two decades on income distribution. The pandemics in our sample, even though much smaller in scale than COVID-19, have led to increases in the Gini coefficient, raised the income share of higher-income deciles, and lowered the employment-to-population ratio for those with basic education compared to those with higher education. We provide some evidence that the distributional consequences from the current pandemic may be larger than those flowing from the historical pandemics in our sample, and larger than those following typical recessions and financial crises.The online version contains supplementary material avai…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSociology and Political ScienceInequalityGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesCOVID-19General Economics Econometrics and FinancePandemicsGeneral Environmental Science
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What makes a creative day? A diary study on the interplay between affect, job stressors, and job control

2010

Applying a within-person perspective to research on creativity at work, this diary study examined daily positive and negative affect (NA) in the morning as well as daily job stressors (time pressure and situational constraints) as predictors of daily creativity. In addition, the general level of job control was investigated as a cross-level moderator in these relationships. Hypotheses were tested in a sample of 90 interior architects (N = 326 days) who completed a general survey and two daily surveys over the course of one work week. Hierarchical linear modeling showed that a higher level of positive affect (PA) in the morning as well as an intermediate level of daily time pressure was rela…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementSociology and Political ScienceJob controlMultilevel modelStressorJob attitudeAffect (psychology)ModerationDevelopmental psychologyOccupational stressPsychologySocial psychologyGeneral PsychologyApplied PsychologyMorningJournal of Organizational Behavior
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