Generalizing the importance of occupational and career views to job satisfaction attitudes
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Michael T. Brannick,et al. Construction of a Job in General scale: A comparison of global, composite, and specific measures. , 1989 .
[2] T. R. Manley,et al. Cosmopolitan-local orientations as predictors of scientific productivity, organizational productivity, and job satisfaction for scientists and engineers , 1979, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management.
[3] H. Trice,et al. An Empirical Study of Howard Becker's Side-Bet Theory , 1969 .
[4] J. B. Shaw,et al. Social influences on judgments about tasks , 1979 .
[5] T. Cook,et al. Quasi-experimentation: Design & analysis issues for field settings , 1979 .
[6] Ricky W. Griffin,et al. Objective and social sources of information in task redesign: A field experiment. , 1983 .
[7] John P. Campbell,et al. JOB SATISFACTION: ARE ALL THE PARTS THERE? , 1983 .
[8] E. A. Locke. The nature and causes of job satisfaction , 1976 .
[9] R. Lazarus. Thoughts on the relations between emotion and cognition. , 1982 .
[10] R. Dawis,et al. A Theory of Work Adjustment. (A Revision). Minnesota Studies in Vocational Rehabilitation: XXIII. , 1968 .
[11] John P. Campbell,et al. Job satisfaction and the fit between individual needs and organizational rewards , 1983 .
[12] Neal Schmitt,et al. A longitudinal study of a valence model approach for the prediction of job satisfaction of new employees. , 1983 .
[13] Richard S. Lazarus,et al. On the Primacy of Cognition. , 1984 .
[14] J. Pfeffer,et al. A social information processing approach to job attitudes and task design. , 1978, Administrative science quarterly.
[15] J. Pfeffer,et al. An examination of need-satisfaction models of job attitudes. , 1977 .
[16] Barry Gerhart,et al. How important are dispositional factors as determinants of job satisfaction? Implications for job design and other personnel programs. , 1987 .
[17] Fred H. Borgen,et al. Occupational Reinforcer Patterns. Minnesota Studies in Vocational Rehabilitation: XXIV. First Volume. , 1968 .
[18] Barry M. Staw,et al. Stability in the Midst of Change: A Dispositional Approach to Job Attitudes , 1985 .
[19] S. Folkman,et al. Stress, appraisal, and coping , 1974 .
[20] Vida Scarpello,et al. The matching model: An examination of the processes underlying realistic job previews. , 1990 .
[21] Joseph P. Stokes,et al. Dispositional approach to job satisfaction: Role of negative affectivity. , 1989 .
[22] Stephen M. Colarelli,et al. Comparative effects of personal and situational influences on job outcomes of new professionals. , 1987 .
[23] Caryl E. Rusbult,et al. Exchange variables as predictors of job satisfaction, job commitment, and turnover: The impact of rewards, costs, alternatives, and investments. , 1981 .
[24] E. A. Locke,et al. Sources of satisfaction and dissatisfaction among solid waste management employees. , 1974 .
[25] Thomas J. Bouchard,et al. Job Satisfaction: Environmental and Genetic Components , 1989 .
[26] T. Mitchell,et al. Job Enrichment Versus Social Cues: A Comparison and Competitive Test , 1979 .
[27] Charles A. O'Reilly,et al. Informational influence as a determinant of perceived task characteristics and job satisfaction. , 1979 .
[28] John E. Stecklein,et al. A three-decade comparison of college faculty characteristics, satisfactions, activities, and attitudes , 1981 .
[29] James L. Koch,et al. Job attachment, satisfaction, and turnover among public sector employees , 1978 .
[30] Pamela S. Tolbert,et al. Aspirations to manage: A comparison of engineering students and working engineers , 1988 .
[31] Barry M. Staw,et al. The dispositional approach to job attitudes: A lifetime longitudinal test. , 1986 .