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Validation of the German version of the Career Adapt-Abilities Scale and its relation to orientations to happiness and work stress
Affiliation:1. Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research LIVES — Overcoming vulnerability: Life course perspectives (NCCR LIVES), University of Lausanne, Switzerland;2. NCCR LIVES, University of Zurich, Switzerland;3. Department of Psychology, University of Zurich, Switzerland;4. Institute of Psychology, University of Lausanne, Switzerland;1. University of Iceland, Department of Human and Social Sciences, Gimli v. Sæmundargötu, 101 Reykjavík, Iceland;2. University of Iceland, Department of Psychology, Gimli v. Sæmundargötu, 101 Reykjavík, Iceland;1. Renmin University of China, Beijing, China;2. University of Surrey, UK;3. The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China;4. Central University of Finance and Economics, Beijing, China;5. Huaqiao University, Fujian Province, China
Abstract:Career adapt-ability has recently gained momentum as a psychosocial construct that not only has much to offer the field of career development, but also contributes to positive coping, adjustment and self-regulation through the four dimensions of concern, control, curiosity and confidence. The positive psychology movement, with concepts such as the orientations to happiness, explores the factors that contribute to human flourishing and optimum functioning. This research has two main contributions; 1) to validate a German version of the Career Adapt-Abilities Scale (CAAS), and 2) to extend the contribution of adapt-abilities to the field of work stress and explore its mediating capacity in the relation between orientations to happiness and work stress. We used a representative sample of the German-speaking Swiss working population including 1204 participants (49.8% women), aged between 26 and 56 (Mage = 42.04). Results indicated that the German version of the CAAS is valid, with overall high levels of model fit suggesting that the conceptual structure of career adapt-ability replicates well in this cultural context. Adapt-abilities showed a negative relationship to work stress, and a positive one with orientations to happiness. The engagement and pleasure scales of orientations to happiness also correlated negatively with work stress. Moreover, career adapt-ability mediates the relationship between orientations to happiness and work stress. In depth analysis of the mediating effect revealed that control is the only significant mediator. Thus control may be acting as a mechanism through which individuals attain their desired life at work subsequently contributing to reduced stress levels.
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