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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

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Yang, Cheng-mei 09 November 2009 (has links)
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12

Employee Gratitude: A New Direction for Understanding Organizational Citizenship Behaviour

Spence, Jeffrey Robert January 2010 (has links)
Organizational citizenship behaviour (OCB) is extra-role behaviour that is not formally required by organizations, but benefits the organization and its members (Organ, 1988). OCB is considered to be a core dimension of job performance (Rotundo & Sackett, 2002) with research showing that OCB contributes to the health and productivity of organizations (e.g., Podsakoff, Whiting, Podsakoff, & Blume, 2009). As a result, both organizational researchers and organizations have long been interested in understanding the origins of this behaviour. However, research into the antecedents of OCB has important limitations. Notably, this research has conceptualized OCB as a static construct, which recent theorizing and research indicates is an inaccurate assumption (e.g., Beal, Weiss, Barros, & MacDermid, 2005; Ilies, Scott, & Judge, 2006). Additionally, OCB research has relied on a single theoretical framework, social exchange theory, to explain previous findings, creating narrowness in the field. The current dissertation sought to address these important limitations by conceptualizing OCB as a dynamic construct (i.e., one that has sizable day-to-day within-person variability) and examining the ability of state gratitude, a novel and theoretically relevant antecedent, to predict OCB. Drawing on the Moral Affect Model of gratitude, Affective Events Theory, and Broaden and Build Theory, I propose that state gratitude is an important driver of day-to-day fluctuations in OCB. In two daily diary studies, my findings revealed that, as predicted, dynamic fluctuations in OCB were significantly predicted by state gratitude. Additionally, in the second of two daily diary studies, state gratitude was successfully induced by a “count your blessings” task and state gratitude was found to be a significant mediator of the induction and OCB. Overall, the results lend support to the notion that OCB is dynamic and that state gratitude, a discrete positive emotion, can be an effective driver of OCB.
13

An empirical investigation into the relationships among knowledge sharing behaviour,organizational citizenship behaviour, job satisfaction and organizational commitment

Mogotsi, Isaac Carter 10 June 2010 (has links)
This study argues that knowledge sharing behaviour is a kind of organizational citizenship behaviour and that as such (i) the two should be strongly positively correlated and that (ii) strong predictors of organizational citizenship behaviour should also strongly predict knowledge sharing behaviour. Since the organizational behaviour literature identifies job satisfaction and organizational commitment as robust predictors of organizational citizenship behaviour, the study investigated the interrelationships among knowledge sharing behaviour, organizational citizenship behaviour, job satisfaction, and organizational commitment. The study employed a correlational survey design, sourcing the empirical data from secondary school teachers in a number of schools in and around Gaborone, Botswana. As expected, knowledge sharing behaviour and organizational citizenship behaviour were significantly positively correlated, organizational commitment was a significant predictor of organizational citizenship behaviour, and job satisfaction and organizational commitment were significantly positively correlated. Contrary to expectations, however, both job satisfaction and organizational commitment were unrelated to knowledge sharing behaviour. Not all study hypotheses were supported, and as such, it would be premature to conclude, on the strength of the evidence presented in this thesis, that knowledge sharing behaviour indeed is a kind of organizational citizenship behaviour. Nevertheless, the positive correlation between knowledge sharing behaviour and organizational citizenship behaviour would seem to suggest that the role of organizational citizenship behaviour in organizational knowledge sharing is worth investigating further. / Thesis (DPhil)--University of Pretoria, 2010. / Information Science / unrestricted
14

Individual Differences in Group Interaction Behaviour: Cultural Differences in the Exhibition of Organizational Citizenship Behaviours

Lillevik, Waheeda 11 1900 (has links)
<p> Discrimination in employment still exists in Canada despite legislative attempts to minimize the disparity in treatment of minorities in the workplace. This dissertation examines the possibility of whether deep-level characteristics, such as differences in behaviour, are culturally influenced.</p> <p> Organizational citizenship behaviours (OCB) in the workplace have been a popular area of study for nearly twenty years in the industrial/organizational psychology literature. Research has demonstrated that OCBs can explain variance in job performance over and above that of task performance. While much of the OCB research has focused on the antecedents of OCBs (particularly individual attributes), a handful of cross-cultural and intercultural studies have been conducted with respect to OCBs; however, the type of studies and the findings from these studies have varied widely. Cross-cultural studies have evaluated OCBs in a single non-Western culture, collectivism and individualism as within-culture individual differences and their effects on OCBs, demographic dissimilarity in teams and OCBs, the role of perceptions and the exhibition of OCBs, and the presence and structure of OCB in different countries. From these studies, one can draw few conclusions about the status of national culture as an antecedent of OCB.</p> <p> The main objectives of this study were to investigate whether OCBs are culturally determined (using Vygotsky's sociocultural theory as an underlying basis for this hypothesis and using Hofstede's cultural framework), and whether individual acculturation and gender orientation moderate this relationship. Findings reveal overall that these three variables explain little of the variance in OCBs. None of the moderation hypotheses were supported for individual-level OCBs (OCB-I) or for team-oriented OCBs (OCB-T). Power distance was the only one of Hofstede's cultural dimensions that had relationships (both negative) with OCB-I and OCB-T. Gender orientation and acculturation played more prominent roles as independent variables instead of moderators, though the coefficients were weak. The study also revealed that individual levels of acculturation to Canadian culture may be more of an influencing factor on organizational citizenship behaviours than individual scores on national dimensions. The overall findings show that cultural differences do not have much influence on the exhibition of OCBs within work teams; however, further research must be done to assess the underlying mechanisms of discrimination in the workplace.</p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
15

Can High Performance Work Systems Transfer Organizational Citizenship Behavior from A Discretionary to A Sustainable Advantage? The Questions of How, Why, and When

Wang, Chun-Hsiao 06 1900 (has links)
One issue that has been neglected and is gaining currency in the organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) literature is the extent to which individuals consider OCB to be part of the job (OCB role definition). A recent meta-analytic review reveals that employees are more likely to perform OCB when they define OCB as in-role rather than as extra-role. However, little attention has been paid to the influences of organizational practices on employee OCB role definition. This neglect is of particular relevance because researchers have argued that how employees view their role obligations are likely to be subject to some purposeful organizational practices. Thus, this paper focuses on the effects of high-performance work systems (HPWS) on employee OCB role definition. This paper adopts multiple theoretical perspectives (e.g., social exchange, organizational identification, ability-motivation-opportunity, and trust) to understand how, why, and when HPWS cause employees to expand their job requirements to include OCBs like helping and voice. Using a multisource data collected at 4 waves from 208 supervisor-employee dyads in Taiwan, I examined the following: (a) the direct effect of employee-experienced HPWS on employee helping and voice role definitions, (b) the mediating roles of employee helping and voice role definitions in the employee-experienced HPWS and actual employee helping and voice relationships, (c) the mediating roles of employee social exchange and organizational identification perceptions toward the organization, as well as employee efficacy, instrumentality, and autonomy perceptions toward helping and voice in the relationships between employee-experienced HPWS and OCB role definitions, (d) the direct effect of employee trust in supervisor on employee helping and voice role definitions, and (e) the moderating role of employee trust in supervisor in the relationships between employee-experienced HPWS and employee helping and voice role definitions. The results confirm the direct effects of employee-experienced HPWS and trust in supervisor, the mediating effects of employee helping and voice role definition, and employee efficacy, instrumentality, and autonomy perceptions toward helping and voice, as well as the moderating effects of employee trust in supervisor, such that employee trust in supervisor strengthened the effects of employee-experienced HPWS on employee helping and voice role definitions when trust in supervisor was high than when it was low. Implications for research and practice are discussed. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
16

Den sista pusselbiten : En kvalitativ studie om medarbetarskapets ansvar

Sjödin, Henny, Tapani, Matilda January 2015 (has links)
Under lång tid har forskningen fokuserat på hur ledarskapet kan utvecklas och bidra till en effektiv organisation. På senare tid har forskningen börjat belysa även medarbetarens roll i verksamheten. Dock sker denna forskning ur ledarens perspektiv och medarbetarnas perspektiv saknas till stor del. Syftet med detta examensarbete var att genom kvalitativa intervjuer kartlägga upplevelsen av psykologiskt empowerment och förstå hur det kan ses som en del i medarbetarskapet bland ledare och medarbetare, ur ett medarbetarperspektiv. Psykologiskt empowerment berör den anställdes upplevelse av att kunna påverka sin arbetsroll, utföra ett meningsfullt arbete och påverka viktiga beslut. Genom att analysera denna upplevelse kan styrkor och utvecklingsmöjligheter identifieras i medarbetarskapet och ligga till grund för ett vidare utvecklingsarbete. Studien genomfördes på utvalda butiker inom Systembolaget i Västerbottens län. Det som framkom i studien är att det saknas en samsyn gällande medarbetarskapets innebörd. Skillnaden som identifierats är att medarbetarna saknar en arbetsgivaraspekt sett till definitionen av medarbetarskap, något som cheferna framhåller som en viktig del. Arbetsgivaraspekten rör det ansvar som medarbetaren har gentemot arbetsgivaren i och med en anställning. Utifrån de fyra faktorerna i psykologiskt empowerment: kompetens, självbestämmande, påverkan och meningsfullhet, framgår att kompetens och meningsfullhet är de faktorer som är väl genomarbetade inom Systembolaget. Gällande självbestämmande och påverkan finns utvecklingspotential. Utifrån studien kunde följande konstateras; viljan att dela med sig av makt finns hos ledarna, dock är viljan till att ta emot denna tudelad hos medarbetarna. Viljan hos båda parter bör finnas för att skapa förutsättningar för psykologiskt empowerment. Vidare konstateras att en gemensam syn på medarbetarskapets innebörd där förväntningar tydliggörs kan komma att skapa en positiv spiraleffekt för psykologiskt empowerment och medarbetarskap.
17

The Relationship among Transformational Leadership, Organizational Commitment and Organizational Citizenship Behavior - A Study of Network Department in a Telecommunication Company

Chen, Mei-fei 03 September 2007 (has links)
This thesis is to study the relationship among transformational leadership, organizational commitment and organizational citizenship behavior within team levels and cross-levels. The analysis demonstrated in this thesis is based on 305 questionnaires collected from 63 leaders and 242 questionnaires from team members. The conclusions are listed as following. 1. The relationship between transformational leadership and organizational commitment (1) Transformational leadership positively impacts organizational commitment. (2) If the team members feel the inspiration from leaders, it will positively impact team members¡¦ value commitment; if they feel leaders¡¦ Idealized Influence, they will be positively impacted in retention commitment. (3) Transformational leadership is not the key factor of influencing team members¡¦ organizational commitment. 2. The relationship between transformational leadership and organizational citizenship behavior (1) If the leaders enhance their transformational leadership, it will be helpful of strengthening team members¡¦ OCB in the aspects of identification with the company, interpersonal harmony, civic virtue, conscientiousness and altruism. (2) In cross level, transformational leadership does effect the correlation to interpersonal harmony.
18

The Effects of Perceptions of Organizational Politics on Organizational Citizenship Behavior: An Intergrated Analysis Study of Structural-Equation-Modeling

Hsu, Chung-Yin 16 August 2010 (has links)
The perceptions of organizational politics and organizational citizenship behavior are neither regulated nor indentified in any organization. But, they are exactly existed in organization. This study is based on the revise model of Perceptions of Organizational Politics (POP) proposed by Ferris et al. (2002). We investigate the relationship between the perceptions of organizational politics and the organizational citizenship behavior. Furthermore, we investigate the indirect effect between the perceptions of organizational politics and the subordinates of organizational citizenship behavior. This study used the scales of 35 items collected by Dr. Chin-ming Ho and the other members of the last research team of POP in 2008. The research is based on the revision model of POP and questionnaire survey. The sample consisted of 1,890 employee selected from 40 organizations covering 9 industrial sectors in Taiwan. The method, path analysis with latent variables of the structural equation modeling (SEM) is used to measure the relationship among the constructs. The major result of this study is as following: 1. The perceptions of organizational politics have negative effect on the organizational citizenship behavior. 2. The perceptions of organizational politics have negative effect on the altruism toward colleagues 3. The perceptions of organizational politics have negative effect on the conscientiousness 4. The perceptions of organizational politics have negative effect on the identification with company 5. The perceptions of organizational politics have negative effect on the interpersonal harmony 6. The perceptions of organizational politics have negative effect on the protecting company resources
19

A Study of Improving Service Quality of Life Insurance Agents ¡V Base on F Company

Huang, Mei-O 31 August 2010 (has links)
With the trend of financial business integration, the life insurance companies face keen market competition. They are forced to develop multiple channels since the agency channel which was the main distribution channel can not stay competitive in the market. In 2009, 63.15% of first-year premium collections on life insurance products come from the bancassurance channel and 33.85% are from the agency channel. However, life insurance products are intangible and agents play significant roles during service delivery in order to meet various customers¡¦ need. This is why most life companies still choose to strengthen the agency channel. Thus, it merits a better attention to probe into the relationships between life companies and their agents. The study is conducted by the questionnaire survey on F Life Insurance Company. Throughout interviewing 509 agents and 200 customers, the datum of the research is made by reliability analysis, descriptive analysis, Pearson correlation analysis, independent sample t-test, ANOVA, and multiple regression analysis to verify the identity degrees of the interviewees on the organizational commitment, the professional commitment, the organizational citizenship behavior, and the service quality. Following are the major findings: 1. Each one of the organizational commitment, the professional commitment, and the organizational citizenship behavior are statistically significant and positive correlated to the service quality. Among them, the organizational citizenship behavior is with the strongest influence on the service quality, then the professional commitment second, and the organizational commitment last. 2. Among the sub-dimensions, the continuance commitment in the organizational commitment explains most the variations of the service quality. Also, the professional involvement in the professional commitment explains most the one. And, the participation in the organizational citizenship behavior explains the most the one and then the service delivery. It means that the professional involvement and the participation of the agents are with significant effects on the service quality. 3. The variations in the identity degrees of the service quality of the agents and the customers are significantly different. 4. The variations in the identity degrees of the organizational commitment of the different agency channel are significantly different. From the findings of the research, the organizational citizenship behavior is proven the most impacts on the service quality and the professional commitment influences the organizational citizenship behavior more than the organizational commitment. Consequently, the life companies should invest more training resources to upgrade agents¡¦ professional capability except for enhancing the organizational identification of agents. Professional agents are more confident of selling and delivering service, and perform organizational citizenship behavior better, so that earn customers¡¦ trust and improve service quality. Ultimately, it creates irreplaceable value of the agency channel.
20

A Study on the Relationships between training, organizational commitment, professional commitment, and organizational citizenship behavior¡ÐThe Moderating Effect of attitude for the supervisor

Chung, Wu-chung 15 August 2011 (has links)
Besides offering good salary, companies in China start to enhance the job satisfaction of employee to retain employees. The demission rate Uni-President Group has always been lower than others in the same industry; even lower than the overall demission rate of many China enterprises. Among various reasons to affect the demission rate, Uni-President Group in China has a complete and systematic education and training system. Therefore, we set the training as an independent variable, and the three dimensions of organizational commitment to work, professional commitment, and the organizational citizenship behaviors as dependent variables, to discover the effect of independent variable to dependent variables. We set the supervisor¡¦s attitudes toward employees in the process of training as adjustment variable. Our hypothesis is that the supervisor¡¦s attitude will have effect in organizational commitment to work, professional commitment, and the organizational citizenship behaviors of employee. In the sample of 302 full-time employees of Uni-President Group in China, the amount of different training courses accepted by employee will have effect on the three dimensions, organizational commitment, professional commitment, and organizational citizenship behaviors of work. And supervisor¡¦s attitudes di have adjust effect in organizational commitment to work, professional commitment, and the organizational citizenship behaviors of employee.

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