Test of a social cognitive model of work satisfaction in teachers |
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Authors: | Ryan D. Duffy Robert W. Lent |
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Affiliation: | a University of Florida, Department of Psychology, PO Box 112250, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA b University of Maryland, Department of Counseling and Personnel Services, 3214 Benjamin Building, College Park, MD 20742, USA |
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Abstract: | Lent and Brown [Lent, R. W., & Brown, S. D. (2006). Integrating person and situation perspectives on work satisfaction: A social-cognitive view. Journal of Vocational Behavior,69, 236-247] recently proposed an integrative model of work satisfaction linked to social cognitive career theory. The model posits that work satisfaction is predicted by five classes of variables: work conditions, goal progress, self-efficacy, goal and efficacy relevant supports, and personality traits (e.g., positive affect). We tested this model in a sample of 366 teachers, finding good overall model-data fit. Of the five predictor classes, work conditions, self-efficacy, and positive affect were each found to explain unique predictive variance. This suggests that teachers who are most satisfied with their jobs see their work environment as supportive, are confident in their abilities to complete work-related tasks and goals, and report high levels of trait positive affect. Findings also offered support for the contention that measures of subjective person-environment fit may not be empirically distinct from work satisfaction. Implications of these findings for future research and applied efforts are considered. |
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Keywords: | Work satisfaction Work conditions Social cognitive career theory Self-efficacy Support Positive affect Teachers |
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