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HRM 601 Organizational Behavior Session 3 Individual Difference, Personality & Attitudes
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Individual Performance Factors Individual Abilities Effort Organizational Support
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Personality A relatively stable And unique Pattern of behavior, thoughts & emotions Shown by an individual
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Erikson’s Psycho-Social Model of Personality Development Infancy: Trust vs Mistrust Toddler-hood: Autonomy vs Shame Childhood: Competency vs Inferiority Adolescence: Identity vs Role confusion Early Adulthood: Intimacy vs isolation Middle Adulthood: Generativity vs stagnation Late Adulthood: Ego integrity vs despair
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The Big Five Personality Traits Conscientiousness Organized, self- disciplined, responsible Disorganized, undisciplined, irresponsible
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Big Five Cont’d Extroversion - introversion Sociable, talkative, active Sober, quiet, reserved
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Big Five Cont’d Agreeableness Good-natured, gentle, cooperative, forgiving Cantankerous, irritable, uncooperative
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Big Five Con’t Emotional stability Calm. enthusiastic, secure Anxious, depressed, angry, insecure
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Big Five Con’t. Openness to experience Imaginative, creative, sensitive Insensitive, narrow, unimaginative
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Other Traits Locus of control –Internal vs external Self-monitoring –High self-monitors vs Low self- monitors
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Cognitive Ability General intelligence -- ability to think analytically, reason, problem solve –Verbal –Numerical –General knowledge –Reasoning ability –Spatial ability
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Physical Ability Motor skills: manual dexterity, eye- hand coordination, reaction time Fitness: strength, stamina
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Measuring Personality & Ability Reliability: The extent to which test scores are consistent from time to time Validity: Extent to which a test is actually measuring what it claims to measure
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Measuring Personality & Ability Projective tests: Test which use ambiguous stimuli to measure personality. Objective tests: Inventories or questionnaires used to measure personality. These are scored by any objective key so there is no room for interpretation to answers
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Attitude Defined Stable cluster of Feelings Beliefs and Behavioral Intentions Towards specific people, things, or events
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Attitudinal Components Beliefs -- cool thoughts Feelings -- hot emotions Behavioral intentions -- tendency to respond or behave consistent with attitude
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Developing an Attitude Information Learning Modeling
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Predicting Behavior Thought and feeling consistency Subjective norms Direct experience Attitude accessibility
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Job Satisfaction Feelings, Beliefs, and Evaluations of a person’s job
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Herzberg’s Two Factor Theory Motivators –personal growth –recognition –responsibility –promotion opportunities –achievement
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Two Factor Theory, Con’t. Hygiene –supervision –pay –company policies –working conditions –co-workers –job security
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Consequences of Job Satisfaction Withdrawal behavior –Absenteeism –Turnover –Time theft
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Influences of Job Satisfaction Quality supervision Fair pay Empowerment Person-job fit
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Organizational Commitment Extent to which an individual Identifies with, Is involved with, Is unwilling to leave The organization
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Consequences of Organizational Commitment Continuance Willingness to make shared sacrifices Organizational citizenship
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Influences of Organizational Commitment Social responsibility Enriched jobs Participatory management Aligning workers’ interests with company Demonstrating trust
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