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Gavin, James F. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1975
The purpose of this study was to examine a model for investigating employee mental health in industrial environments and, more particularly, to determine the extent to which a worker's perceptionss of the environment covaried with mental health criteria. (Author)
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction, Mental Health, Research Projects
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Elton, Charles F.; Smart, John C. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1988
Examined Holland's construct of congruence with job dissatisfaction among 1,869 employed persons. Developed congruence scale based on job aspirations as college freshmen, graduating major, and actual job in 1980. More men than women were dissatisfied with income, fringe benefits, and promotion opportunity. Those with high level of congruence were…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Congruence (Psychology), Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction
Dickinson, Terry L.; Wijting, Jan P. – 1971
Employees' attitudes toward a proposed 4-day, 40-hour workweek were examined relative to job and worker variables, expectations about the new workweek schedule, and job-aspect satisfactions. Employees classified by their sex, work shifts, wage schedules, and sex and work shifts differed significantly in their attitudes toward the 4-day, 40-hour…
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Job Satisfaction, Organizational Climate, Sex Differences
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Soni, Vidu – Public Administration Review, 2000
Discusses the influence of employee race/ethnicity and gender identity, associated stereotyping and prejudice, and the nature of interpersonal relations on acceptance of diversity and support for diversity-management initiatives. A case study of 160 supervisors and 350 employees illustrates which factors influence employee support for diversity in…
Descriptors: Diversity (Institutional), Employee Attitudes, Interpersonal Relationship, Public Sector
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Mossholder, Kevin W.; And Others – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1985
Public and industrial accountants (N=425) completed the California Psychological Inventory (CPI). CPI scales successfully discriminated suboccupations within male and female samples. Results indicated that individuals belonging to intraoccupational concentrations were distinguishable in terms of personality, perceived work climate, and outcome…
Descriptors: Accountants, Career Choice, Employee Attitudes, Occupational Aspiration
Miller, Joanne – 1979
Based on two related sets of data from the 1979 Kohn and Schooler followup study of 626 men, ages 26-65, who were part of the employed, civilian labor force in 1964, a study investigated the determinants of job satisfaction for these men, and 269 of their 555 wives who were formally employed ten or more hours per week. Correlations between job…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Employed Women, Employee Attitudes, Employees
Pavelka, Joe – Camping Magazine, 1991
Among 157 staff members surveyed in 15 residential summer camps in the fifth week of the program, males had significantly higher levels of role conflict than females, and staff in small camps had significantly higher levels of role ambiguity than those in large camps. Role conflict and role ambiguity were associated with job satisfaction and job…
Descriptors: Camping, Employee Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship, Job Satisfaction
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Odden, Christie M.; Sias, Patricia M. – Communication Quarterly, 1997
Finds that perceptions of an organization's climate (dimensions of cohesion, pressure, innovation, trust, support, and recognition) were associated with the types of communication relationships employees form with their peers. Finds that these associations were moderated in part by gender, suggesting that men and women differ significantly in the…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Communication Research, Employee Attitudes, Higher Education
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Starrels, Marjorie E. – Journal of Family Issues, 1992
Analyzes research on workplace family policy. Highlights salient themes such as corporate culture, gender and class differences regarding support for policies, and government role. Articulates theoretical framework for understanding barriers to progressive family policies in workplace, identifying competing social, cultural, and psychological…
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Employer Attitudes, Family Life, Models
Crosby, Faye – 1979
An exploration of interpersonal justice suggests some connections among relative deprivation theory, justice theory, and depression research. Distinctions between home life and work life are necessary in thinking about fairness, deservingness, and deprivation. A survey of over 400 adults explored the extent to which men and women feel deprived…
Descriptors: Adults, Depression (Psychology), Employed Women, Employee Attitudes
Mathis, Patricia A.; Prokop, Ruth T. – 1981
This report represents the culmination of a year-long evaluation of the nature and extent of sexual harassment in the federal government. The various chapters explore the: (1) attitudes of federal employees toward sexual harassment; (2) extent of sexual harassment in the federal workplace; (3) characteristics of victims and perpetrators of sexual…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employee Attitudes, Federal Government, Government Employees
Gutek, Barbara A. – 1981
Sexual harassment at work has recently received considerable attention. Working men (N=405) and women (N=827) in Los Angeles County responded to questions about respondent's work, job characteristics, and work climate. Other questions concerned the respondent's experience of socio-sexual behaviors on current and previous jobs, definitions of…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employee Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship, Expectation
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Ross, Catherine E.; Mirowsky, John – Social Forces, 1996
Among 1,286 employed persons responding to the Work, Family, and Well-Being survey, women received more interpersonal work rewards (thanks and recognition) than did men, and these rewards correlated negatively with earnings. However, men and women did not differ in their ratings of interpersonal or economic work rewards as subjectively rewarding.…
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), Employed Women, Employee Attitudes, Income
Dunseath, Jennifer L.; And Others – 1991
Occupational stress is specific to the workplace and tends to be a global term used to describe stressors, the occupational conditions that cause difficulties for an individual, and strains, the conditions resulting from experiencing work stressors. While the effects of occupational stress on employees are well documented, this study further…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Blue Collar Occupations, Employee Attitudes, Employees
Boyd, Sally; Wylie, Cathy – 1994
This study examined the workloads of academic, general, support, library, and technical staff of New Zealand universities. It focused on current levels of workload, changes in workload levels and content, connections between workload and stress, and staff attitudes towards the effects of workload changes and educational reforms on the quality of…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, College Faculty, Educational Change, Employee Attitudes
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