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Hoppmann, Christiane A.; Klumb, Petra L. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2012
This study uses one-week time-sampling information from 104 employed parents with pre-school children to examine the association between daily workloads, control strategies, and goal progress. In addition, it examines relationships between work- and family-goal progress and important stress indices such as positive/negative affect and cortisol…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Preschool Children, Family Work Relationship, Goal Orientation
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Tsaousides, Theodore; Jome, LaRae – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2008
The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of career compromise on positive affect (PA), negative affect (NA), and work-related satisfaction (WRS). Career compromise refers to the modification of occupational preferences under pressing external circumstances [Gottfredson, L. S. (1981). Circumscription and compromise: A…
Descriptors: College Students, Career Choice, Occupational Aspiration, Trend Analysis
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Porfeli, Erik J.; Wang, Chuang; Hartung, Paul J. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2008
Theory and research suggest that children develop orientations toward work appreciably influenced by their family members' own expressed work experiences and emotions. Cross-sectional data from 100 children (53 girls, 47 boys; mean age = 11.1 years) and structural equation modeling were used to assess measures of work affectivity and experiences…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Career Development, Work Attitudes, Children
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Chen, Zheng; Powell, Gary N.; Greenhaus, Jeffrey H. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2009
This study adopted a person-environment fit approach to examine whether greater congruence between employees' preferences for segmenting their work domain from their family domain (i.e., keeping work matters at work) and what their employers' work environment allowed would be associated with lower work-to-family conflict and higher work-to-family…
Descriptors: Employees, Conflict, Family Work Relationship, Work Environment
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Panaccio, Alexandra; Vandenberghe, Christian – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2012
Using a one-year longitudinal study of four components of organizational commitment (affective, normative, continuance-sacrifices, and continuance-alternatives) on a sample of employees from multiple organizations (N=220), we examined the relationships of employee Big-Five personality traits to employee commitment components, and the mediating…
Descriptors: Employees, Employee Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship, Personality Traits
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Allen, Tammy D.; Johnson, Ryan C.; Saboe, Kristin N.; Cho, Eunae; Dumani, Soner; Evans, Sarah – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2012
Meta-analysis was used to comprehensively summarize the relationship between dispositional variables and both directions of work-family conflict. The largest effects detected were those associated with negative affect, neuroticism, and self-efficacy; all were in expected directions. In general, negative trait-based variables (e.g., negative affect…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Self Efficacy, Conflict, Family Work Relationship
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Hirschi, Andreas; Lee, Bora; Porfeli, Erik J.; Vondracek, Fred W. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2013
Proactive career behaviors become increasingly important in today's career environment, but little is known about how and when motivational patterns affect individual differences. In a six-month longitudinal study among German university students (Study 1; N = 289) it was demonstrated that motivation in terms of "can do" (self-efficacy…
Descriptors: Behavior, Motivation, Individual Differences, Self Efficacy
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Porfeli, Erik J.; Lee, Bora; Weigold, Ingrid K. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2012
Work valence is derived from expectancy-valence theory and the literature on children's vocational development and is presumed to be a general appraisal of work that emerges during the childhood period. Work valence serves to promote and inhibit the motivation and tasks associated with vocational development. A measure of work valence, composed of…
Descriptors: Work Attitudes, Attitude Measures, High School Students, College Students
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Burns, Richard Andrew; Machin, Michael Anthony – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2012
Eudaimonic notions of well-being have increasingly figured in the well-being literature. The impact of such constructs in the organizational psychology literature has been more limited. Within an Organizational Health Research Framework (OHRF), we present findings that demonstrate the importance of eudaimonic, or psychological well-being (PWB),…
Descriptors: Psychology, Organizational Climate, Well Being, Industrial Psychology
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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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Conway, Neil; Guest, David; Trenberth, Linda – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2011
Rousseau (1989 and elsewhere) argued that a defining feature of psychological contract breach was that once a promise had been broken it could not easily be repaired and therefore that the effects of psychological contract breach outweighed those of psychological contract fulfillment. Using two independent longitudinal surveys, this paper…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Employer Employee Relationship, Accountability, Industrial Psychology
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Cote, Stephane; Saks, Alan M.; Zikic, Jelena – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2006
The present study examines the role of trait affect in job search. One hundred and twenty-three university students completed measures of positive and negative affectivity, conscientiousness, job search self-efficacy, job search clarity, and job search intensity during their last year of school while on the job market. At the end of the school…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, College Students, Self Efficacy, Labor Market
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Blau, Gary; Andersson, Lynne; Davis, Kathleen; Daymont, Tom; Hochner, Arthur; Koziara, Karen; Portwood, Jim; Holladay, Blair – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2008
A model is presented showing hypothesized common and parallel antecedents of employee organizational development activity (ODA) versus professional development activity (PDA). A common antecedent is expected to affect both ODA and PDA, while a parallel antecedent is expected to affect its corresponding work referent. This model was tested using a…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Learning Motivation, Organizational Development, Professional Development
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Crossley, Craig D.; Stanton, Jeffrey M. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2005
The present study examined a longitudinal model of state and trait negative affect as predictors of job-search success. Job-search self-efficacy and job-search intensity were also examined as mediators of the negative affect--job-search success relation. Overall the model offered mixed support for Kasl's (1982) Reverse Causation Hypothesis.…
Descriptors: Job Search Methods, Hypothesis Testing, Self Efficacy, Models
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Multon, Karen D.; And Others – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1995
Usable responses on the Goal Instability Scale, Career Decision Profile, and other measures were obtained from 196 high school students. Decisiveness/indecisiveness was associated with career choice comfort level, occupational knowledge, and negative affect. Goal stability/instability was associated with self-efficacy and positive affect. (SK)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Career Choice, Decision Making, Goal Orientation