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Swanberg, Jennifer E.; McKechnie, Sharon P.; Ojha, Mamta U.; James, Jacquelyn B. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2011
The changing natures of both work and the lives of the U.S. workforce have created an array of challenges for organizations attempting to foster work engagement. To accommodate the work and family needs of an increasingly diverse workforce, many firms are offering flexible work solutions to employees. However, the distribution of these types of…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Work Environment, Working Hours, Work Attitudes
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Burk, Hannah G.; Eby, Lillian T. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2010
This study examines the association between negative mentoring experiences and protege intentions to leave the mentoring relationship. The role of perceived mentoring alternatives and fear of mentor retaliation was also examined as moderators of the relationship between negative mentoring experiences and intentions to leave. Results indicate that…
Descriptors: Mentors, Work Environment, Antisocial Behavior, Negative Attitudes
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Meyer, John P.; Maltin, Elyse R. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2010
Although a great deal is known about the implications of employee commitment for organizations, less attention has been paid to its ramifications for employees themselves. Previous research has been unsystematic and the findings have sometimes been inconsistent. The most consistent findings pertain to the positive links between affective…
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Work Environment, Well Being, Affective Behavior
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ten Brummelhuis, Lieke L.; Bakker, Arnold B.; Euwema, Martin C. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2010
Previous studies have convincingly shown that employees' family lives can affect their work outcomes. We investigate whether family-to-work interference (FWI) experienced by the employee also affects the work outcomes of a co-worker. We predict that the employee's FWI has an effect on the co-worker's outcomes through the crossover of positive and…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Burnout, Family Work Relationship, Employees
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Diestel, Stefan; Schmidt, Klaus-Helmut – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2010
Two specific sources of stress at work have recently received increasing attention in organizational stress research: emotional dissonance (ED) and self-control demands (SCDs). Both theoretical arguments and experimental findings in basic research strongly suggest that ED and different SCDs draw on a common limited regulatory resource.…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Structural Equation Models, Anxiety, Burnout
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Krieshok, Thomas S.; Black, Michael D.; McKay, Robyn A. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2009
The terms of work have changed, with multiple transitions now characterizing the arc of a typical career. This article examines an ongoing shift in the area of vocational decision making, as it moves from a place where "it's all about the match" to one closer to "it's all about adapting to change". We review literatures on judgment and decision…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Evaluative Thinking, Brain, Intuition
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Hu, Xiaoxiao; Kaplan, Seth; Dalal, Reeshad S. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2010
This study examined the degree to which blue- versus white-collar workers differentially conceptualize various job facets, namely the work itself, co-workers, supervisors, and pay. To examine these potential differences, we conducted a series of analyses on job satisfaction ratings from two samples of university workers. Consistent with the study…
Descriptors: Blue Collar Occupations, White Collar Occupations, Attitudes, Comparative Analysis
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Ng, Thomas W. H.; Feldman, Daniel C. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2009
In their quantitative review of the literature, Healy, Lehman, and McDaniel [Healy, M. C., Lehman, M., & McDaniel, M. A. (1995). Age and voluntary turnover: A quantitative review. "Personnel Psychology, 48", 335-345] concluded that age is only weakly related to voluntary turnover (average r = -0.08). However, with the significant changes in…
Descriptors: Race, Tenure, Labor Turnover, Effect Size
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Lapierre, Laurent M.; Spector, Paul E.; Allen, Tammy D.; Poelmans, Steven; Cooper, Cary L.; O'Driscoll, Michael P.; Sanchez, Juan I.; Brough, Paula; Kinnunen, Ulla – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2008
Using samples of managers drawn from five Western countries, we tested a theoretical model linking employees' perceptions of their work environment's family-supportiveness to six different dimensions of work-family conflict (WFC), and to their job satisfaction, family satisfaction, and life satisfaction. Our results are consistent with a causal…
Descriptors: Employees, Life Satisfaction, Job Satisfaction, Conflict
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Allen, Tammy D.; Shockley, Kristen M.; Poteat, Laura F. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2008
This study investigated relationships between workplace factors and family dinners. We examined two aspects of the family dinner, the frequency that the entire family typically has dinner together each week and the frequency that children eat fast food for dinner. Participants were 220 parents who worked at least 20 h a week and had at least one…
Descriptors: Food, Family Work Relationship, Role Conflict, Work Environment
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Kwan, Ho Kwong; Mao, Yina; Zhang, Haina – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2010
The present study investigates the impact of role modeling as perceived by proteges on their personal learning (i.e., relational job learning and personal skill development) and work-to-family enrichment (WFE). Results from a two-wave field survey of 173 proteges in the People's Republic of China indicate that role modeling positively affects…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Job Satisfaction, Employee Attitudes, Work Environment
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Welsh, Elizabeth T.; Wanberg, Connie R. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2009
Drawing upon role-making theory, this study examines which new job market entrants, following college graduation, find informal mentors and how much mentoring they receive from these mentors using a predictive design. Our results suggest that individuals lower in negative affectivity and higher in cognitive ability as well as women, individuals…
Descriptors: Mentors, Gender Differences, Goal Orientation, Cognitive Ability
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Xanthopoulou, Despoina; Bakker, Arnold B.; Demerouti, Evangelia; Schaufeli, Wilmar B. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2009
This study examined longitudinal relationships between job resources, personal resources, and work engagement. On the basis of Conservation of Resources theory, we hypothesized that job resources, personal resources, and work engagement are reciprocal over time. The study was conducted among 163 employees, who were followed-up over a period of 18…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Work Environment, Employee Attitudes, Correlation
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Pachulicz, Sarah; Schmitt, Neal; Kuljanin, Goran – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2008
Objective and subjective career success were hypothesized to mediate the relationships between sociodemographic variables, human capital indices, individual difference variables, and organizational sponsorship as inputs and a retirement decision and intentions to leave either the specialty of emergency medicine (EM) or medicine as output…
Descriptors: Females, Job Satisfaction, Self Efficacy, Physicians
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Steinmetz, Holger; Frese, Michael; Schmidt, Peter – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2008
Theoretical models of the antecedents and outcomes of work-home interference (WHI) suggest that work characteristics (e.g., job stressors, working hours) increase the probability that an individual experiences work-home interference. Since work-home interference is considered as a role stressor, these experiences should be detrimental for…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Structural Equation Models, Motivation, Depression (Psychology)
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