Psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate.

This study aimed to investigate the relationship between psychological capital and the work-related attitudes of job satisfaction and organisational commitment recognising the hierarchical nature of the data. This relationship was examined in light of a supportive organisational climate as defined b...

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Main Author: Naran, Vandana
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/13164
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-131642019-05-11T03:40:24Z Psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate. Naran, Vandana Psychological capital Supervisor support Supportive organisational climate Job satisfaction Organisational commitment Hierarchical linear model This study aimed to investigate the relationship between psychological capital and the work-related attitudes of job satisfaction and organisational commitment recognising the hierarchical nature of the data. This relationship was examined in light of a supportive organisational climate as defined by supervisor support which played the role of a moderator in this relationship. Data was gathered using a number of structured questionnaires which were distributed to employees via an online link. The Psychological Capital Questionnaire (Luthans, Youssef & Avolio, 2007), Organisational Commitment Questionnaire (Mowday, Steers & Porter, 1982), Warr, Cook and Wall’s (1979) measure of job satisfaction and Eisenberger’s (1986) adapted measure of supervisor support were administered. A total of 14 departments participated in the study and 50 employees completed the questionnaires. A Hierarchical Linear Model analysis (HLM) was used to analyse the data along with Pearson product moment correlations and a two-way ANOVA. Results indicated that psychological capital was related moderately and positively to job satisfaction but was not related to organisational commitment. Supervisor support was related to both job satisfaction and organisational commitment. Finally supervisor support moderated the relationship between psychological capital and job satisfaction but no interaction was found for the relationship between psychological capital and organisational commitment as moderated by supervisor support. This paper concludes with a discussion of the results, implications of the findings, limitations and directions for future research. 2013-09-30T05:36:02Z 2013-09-30T05:36:02Z 2013-09-30 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/13164 en application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Psychological capital
Supervisor support
Supportive organisational climate
Job satisfaction
Organisational commitment
Hierarchical linear model
spellingShingle Psychological capital
Supervisor support
Supportive organisational climate
Job satisfaction
Organisational commitment
Hierarchical linear model
Naran, Vandana
Psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate.
description This study aimed to investigate the relationship between psychological capital and the work-related attitudes of job satisfaction and organisational commitment recognising the hierarchical nature of the data. This relationship was examined in light of a supportive organisational climate as defined by supervisor support which played the role of a moderator in this relationship. Data was gathered using a number of structured questionnaires which were distributed to employees via an online link. The Psychological Capital Questionnaire (Luthans, Youssef & Avolio, 2007), Organisational Commitment Questionnaire (Mowday, Steers & Porter, 1982), Warr, Cook and Wall’s (1979) measure of job satisfaction and Eisenberger’s (1986) adapted measure of supervisor support were administered. A total of 14 departments participated in the study and 50 employees completed the questionnaires. A Hierarchical Linear Model analysis (HLM) was used to analyse the data along with Pearson product moment correlations and a two-way ANOVA. Results indicated that psychological capital was related moderately and positively to job satisfaction but was not related to organisational commitment. Supervisor support was related to both job satisfaction and organisational commitment. Finally supervisor support moderated the relationship between psychological capital and job satisfaction but no interaction was found for the relationship between psychological capital and organisational commitment as moderated by supervisor support. This paper concludes with a discussion of the results, implications of the findings, limitations and directions for future research.
author Naran, Vandana
author_facet Naran, Vandana
author_sort Naran, Vandana
title Psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate.
title_short Psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate.
title_full Psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate.
title_fullStr Psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate.
title_full_unstemmed Psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate.
title_sort psychological capital and work-related attitudes : the moderating role of a supportive organisational climate.
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/13164
work_keys_str_mv AT naranvandana psychologicalcapitalandworkrelatedattitudesthemoderatingroleofasupportiveorganisationalclimate
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