NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Americans with Disabilities…1
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 1 to 15 of 89 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Mahfoodh Al Sabbagh – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2024
Purpose: This study explores the factors impacting employee engagement on organizational performance at higher education institutions in Oman. It aims to explore the relationship between employee engagement and organizational performance at these institutions. By providing valuable insights and recommendations, this research aims to develop…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employee Attitudes, Work Attitudes, Higher Education
Meyer, Jan – 1984
Comparing cultural conceptions of sexism to those of racism, this paper identifies lack of contact, social invisibility, ethnocentrism, competition, and unequal power as factors that negatively affect women in the work place. Possible female responses to these factors include: (1) acquiescence to male dominance; (2) aggression; (3) acting and…
Descriptors: Conflict, Females, Males, Sex Differences
Steele, Jim – Online Submission, 2008
When organizations employ professionals it is critical to comprehend the nature of professional identity as it relates to learning in the workplace. These findings indicate ways that professional identity influences workplace learning behavior in doctors of veterinary medicine. Using grounded theory, ethnographic investigation and analysis…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Veterinary Medicine, Professional Development, Self Concept
Hanlon, Martin D. – 1983
Although age and work commitment have been correlated positively in previous studies, the studies have not clearly defined whether it is age per se or the correlates of age (job tenure, length of service) which account for the commitment. To investigate the relationship between age and various indicators of commitment to work (job involvement,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Employees, Employment, Job Satisfaction
Rogers, Vivian – 1986
This paper presents a summary of Murray Brown's family systems theory as it applies to the workplace, lists some indicators of when a system is working well, and cites some other guidelines for gauging and improving one's own functioning in the work system. Major concepts of Bowen's theory include: (1) the family and the workplace are systems; (2)…
Descriptors: Family Influence, Interpersonal Relationship, Organizational Communication, Organizational Theories
Ruh, Robert A.; White, J. Kenneth – 1974
The interrelationships among job involvement, values, personal background, participation in decision making, and job attitudes were investigated by questionnaire for a sample of 2,775 employees of six manufacturing organizations, representing a 66 percent response rate. The results of this study indicated that job involvement, a basic orientation…
Descriptors: Correlation, Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction, Organizational Climate
Fagenson, Ellen A. – 1984
Both person-centered and situation-centered hypotheses have been posited to explain women's limited rise to top corporate positions. To test these hypotheses, 260 employed, corporate women completed a questionnaire assessing their orientations to their careers, organizations, jobs, power, performance, and subordinates. Questions concerning women's…
Descriptors: Career Planning, Employed Women, Females, Individual Power
Gattiker, Urs. E.; Larwood, Laurie – 1985
Despite popular beliefs that managers are successful by virtue of their positions, few studies have examined this position-success relationship. A study was conducted to identify the factors of subjective career success and to determine if the patterns of response would differ between managers and support personnel. Moreover, the phenomenon of…
Descriptors: Administrators, Careers, Employee Attitudes, Job Analysis
York, Kenneth M.; And Others – 1988
This study measured the relationship between job satisfaction and organizational climate on a heterogeneous sample, and the reported incidence of stress-related illnesses as a moderator of the climate-job satisfaction relationship. Subjects were 70 full-time employees who completed a four-part questionnaire consisting of the Litwin and Stringer…
Descriptors: College Students, Diseases, Employee Attitudes, Higher Education
Staudenmier, Julie; Tetrick, Lois E. – 1985
Although previous research on perception of work environment has focused on the underlying structure of the environment, perception of a specific event can indicate whether a three-dimensional model (prediction, understanding, and control) or a two-dimensional model (information and control) accounts for the individual's perception in terms of…
Descriptors: Adults, Employee Attitudes, Goal Orientation, Job Performance
Greenberg, Carl I.; And Others – 1981
The Job Characteristics Model proposed by Hackman and his associates postulates that positive personal and work outcomes are derived from five core job dimensions: skill variety, task identity, task significance, autonomy, and feedback from the job. The effects of the number of workers (work group size) and the number of tasks (task size) on…
Descriptors: Feedback, Job Satisfaction, Job Skills, Motivation
Burke, Ronald J.; And Others – 1975
Several factors associated with increasing discontent in middle management ranks have been identified. One of these is known as a boxed-in feeling or locking-in, which refers to the ongoing feeling an individual has when he has almost no opportunity to move from his present job or when the only position for which he is qualified is the job he…
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction, Management Development, Morale
Peach, Larry; Reddick, Thomas L. – 1998
This paper describes a study conducted in 22 counties in Middle Tennessee to determine the extent to which teachers have experienced sexual harassment. Of the 318 teachers responding, 172 report having been subjected to unwanted harassment. Of those responding positively, 150 are female. The forms of harassment indicated were sexual remarks,…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Occupational Surveys, Public School Teachers, Sexual Harassment
Sanford, Timothy R. – 1983
Job stress among institutional researchers and approaches to managing or coping with stress are considered. In considering different types of stressors and stress reactions, it is noted that stress from all sources is cumulative and cannot be ignored during the workday, and that both pleasant and unpleasant happenings can result in stress. One…
Descriptors: Burnout, Coping, Higher Education, Institutional Research
Gallagher, Denise M.; And Others – 1987
There has been much recent attention given to stress and the negative side effects associated with excessive stress. Employers need to recognize the effect that stress can have on the productivity and attitudes of their employees. To examine work-related stress and to develop stress management strategies, a study was conducted of flight attendants…
Descriptors: Coping, Employee Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship, Interpersonal Communication
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6