The big 5 personality traits
Conscientiousness
Agreeableness
Neuroticism
Openness to experience
Extraversion
Three Types of Commitment
Withdrawal Behavior description
Definition: A set of actions employees perform to avoid the work situation, which may lead to quitting.
Withdrawal Behavior 2 types
Psychological Withdrawal: Mental escape from the work environment (e.g., daydreaming, cyberloafing).
Physical Withdrawal: Physical absence from work (e.g., tardiness, absenteeism, long breaks).
what is locus of control
degree to which individuals believe they control the events affecting them.
2 types of locus of control
External Locus of Control:
they think that everything happens because of mere luck
types of values in job satisfaction
pay satisfaction
promotion satisfaction
supervision satisfaction
values leadership and support
coworker satisfaction
satisfaction with the work itself
What are stress strains
strains are negative conseqauences resulting from the stress response
types of stressors
challenge stressors
time pressure, work complexity, work responsability
hindrance stressors
role conflict, role overload daily hassles
stress Coping Methods
Problem-Focused Coping: Managing the stressor directly by addressing the demand.
Emotion-Focused Coping: Managing the emotional reaction to the stressor.
Types of Forces, motivation
Internal: Purpose, confidence.
External: Goals, incentives.
motivation, Expectancy Theory components:
i. Expectancy: expect that effort leads to performance.
ii. Instrumentality: Belief that performance will result in outcomes.
iii. Valence: The value of those outcomes.
Goal Setting Theory: affects:
i. Self-set goals: Personal benchmarks.
ii. Task strategies: Ways employees work toward goals.
Equity Theory:
c. Underreward Inequity: Leads to lower motivation, counterproductive behaviors.
d. Overreward Inequity: Leads to cognitive distortion, this is when they start to believe that they are working harder and deserve more pay
i. Meaningfulness: Connection between work and personal ideals.
ii. Self-determination: Sense of choice in work tasks.
iii. Competence: Belief in capability to perform tasks.
iv. Impact: Feeling that work makes a difference.
b. Strongest motivators:
i. Self-efficacy/competence.
ii. Goal difficulty.
iii. Expectancy, instrumentality, valence.
compensation systems, individual-focused:
Individual-focused:
i. Piece-rate pay: Payment for each unit produced or sold.
ii. Merit pay: Base salary increase based on performance evaluations.
iii. Lump-sum bonuses: One-time payment for achieving goals.
iiii. Recognition awards: Tangible or intangible rewards for achievements.
3 types of Compensation Systems
a. Individual-focused
b. Unit-focused: Gain sharing encourages collaboration by rewarding team performance.
c. Organization-focused: Profit sharing aligns employee success with organizational success.
Three Types of Trust: DCA
Four Dimensions of Justice:
Four-Component Model of Ethical Decision Making:
Moral Awareness:
i. Recognizing that a moral issue exists in a situation
Types of Knowledge
3 Methods of Learning