• J Occup Health Psychol · Apr 2007

    Combining dispositions and evaluations of vocation and job to account for counterproductive work behavior in adolescent job apprentices.

    • Bernd Marcus and Uwe Wagner.
    • Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada. bmarcus3@uwo.ca
    • J Occup Health Psychol. 2007 Apr 1; 12 (2): 161-76.

    AbstractIn the present research, we investigated the joint impact of selected antecedents of counterproductive work behavior (CWB). A sample of German apprentices reported on their CWB and completed measures of situational evaluations (vocational preference, level and constructiveness of job satisfaction) believed to trigger CWB and of dispositional motivators (measured by integrity test subscales) and controls (self-control and another subset of integrity scales) of CWB. All predictors investigated showed the expected bivariate relationships with CWB. Multivariate analyses revealed that the triggering effect of an unfavorable vocational choice on CWB was fully mediated by job satisfaction. When predictors were aggregated, a composite of dispositional control variables had the largest effect on CWB and moderated the effects of motivational dispositions and situational evaluations. These results extend the knowledge on antecedents of CWB by investigating previously overlooked variables and samples and partially replicate recent findings on the joint impact of dispositions and work-related evaluations on CWB.Copyright (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved.

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