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Ehly, Stewart; Reimers, Thomas M. – Psychology in the Schools, 1986
Compared responses of rural and urban psychologists from a midwestern state on perceptions of job satisfaction, job stability, and quality of professional life. While resembling urban colleagues in most regards, rural psychologists appear more satisfied with working environments and job policies. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Life Satisfaction, Quality of Life, Rural Urban Differences
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O'Brien, Fabius P.; And Others – Public Personnel Management, 1986
A significant main effect was found for type of work environment, confirming the hypothesis that public sector supervisors were more lenient in their evaluations of older employees. Female supervisors were found to be more unfavorable in their evaluations of older employees. Implications of findings and suggestions for future research are offered.…
Descriptors: Employer Attitudes, Females, Government Employees, Older Workers
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Cangelosi, James S.; And Others – Delta Pi Epsilon Journal, 1985
This study investigated what factors affect undergraduate students' consideration of careers in accounting as they matriculate through a typical sequence of introductory accounting courses. Findings indicate that students believe that accountants are likely to find secure positions, those positions are likely to provide healthy incomes, and…
Descriptors: Accounting, Career Choice, College Students, Higher Education
Foster, Badi G.; Wertz, Lana H. – New Directions for Continuing Education, 1986
Describes how a major corporation adapted the prime-time television model to the workplace by using video to help create a more flexible, open culture conducive to change, innovation, and productivity. Discusses the series' objectives, the educational experience, the design method, lessons learned, and potential uses. (CT)
Descriptors: Innovation, Models, Organizational Climate, Productivity
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Fried, Yitzhak; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1984
Reviews the major physiological measures that have been examined in studies of stress at work. Attempts to show that procedures typically used for measuring the physiological symptoms of stress are inadequate and to show how the validity of work stress research can be improved with better measurement methods. (LLL)
Descriptors: Cardiovascular System, Heart Rate, Hypertension, Literature Reviews
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Bergermaier, Rene; And Others – Work and Occupations: An International Sociological Journal, 1984
Past research on the spillover, compensatory, and no-relationship models has not helped to discover the structural relationships among facets of work, nonwork, and general well-being. A more comprehensive approach is presented and illustrated with data from three empirical studies of German workers. (Author/SSH)
Descriptors: Individual Needs, Leisure Time, Life Satisfaction, Recreational Activities
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Sredl, Henry J. – Journal of Epsilon Pi Tau, 1983
Looks at the growth of knowledge and its impact on people and organizations, theoretical models for human resource development, trends in the work force and the workplace, and the implications of the first three for industrial education. (SK)
Descriptors: Human Resources, Industrial Education, Job Satisfaction, Organizational Development
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Putnam, Linda L. – Small Group Behavior, 1983
Examines procedural messages and group work habits of 20 three-person groups, 10 who preferred a tightly structured work cliamte and 10 who preferred a free-associative work routine. Results revealed that structured groups used abstract headings that organized group talk, while free-associative groups used specific details on a content-related…
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Skills, Efficiency, Group Dynamics
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Bons, Paul M.; Fiedler, Fred E. – Administrative Science Quarterly, 1976
This study, based on Fiedler's Contingency Model of Leadership Effectiveness, examines the effect of job rotation, succession, and reassignment of superiors on the behavior and performance of a sample of 115 infantry squad leaders. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior, Leadership, Leadership Styles, Organizational Theories
Brooks, Ann, Ed.; Mackinnon, Alison, Ed. – 2001
This collection explores the impact of globalization and organizational change on academic institutions and their staff. It considers the restructuring of universities as part of a broader process of restructuring academic identities for the global knowledge economy and focuses on how women managers handle change within their institutions. The…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Equal Education, Gender Issues, Higher Education
Leonard, Jacqueline; Horvat, Erin McNamara; Riley-Tillman, T. Chris – 2002
Attempts to achieve diversity in the faculty in institutions of higher education have increased in recent years. Despite these attempts, faculty of color and women are still underrepresented in the higher ranks. This paper presents autobiographies focusing on the career trajectories of three junior faculty members at one institution: a divorced…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Diversity (Faculty), Faculty Recruitment, Females
Pena, Dely; Mitchell, Deborah – NEA Higher Education Research Center Update, 2000
This issue is excerpted from The American Faculty Poll sponsored by the Teachers Investment Annuity Association-College Retirement Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF) and conducted by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago in 1999. In this survey, 1,511 full-time faculty members from 285 institutions were interviewed. About…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Job Satisfaction, National Surveys
Farquhar, Robin H. – 2002
Three aspects of academic career orientation have changed as a result of forces within and external to universities, and these changes have fundamentally altered the nature of the workplace for faculty members, resulting in serious challenges for the leadership of institutions. The changes occurred in: (1) the understanding professors have of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Change, Faculty Workload, Higher Education
Lofstrom, Erika – 2002
This study examined cognitive, that is, information processing, style and its relationship to the experiencing of sources of job satisfaction/dissatisfaction and cognitive demands of the work environment among employees in small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs). The aim of the study was to gain a more thorough understanding of the role of…
Descriptors: Administrators, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Employees
Hansen, Jo-Ida; Sullivan, Brandon A. – 2003
This chapter introduces teachers and other education professionals to the assessment of occupational stress. It begins with a brief discussion of what occupational stress is, and overview of the consequences of prolonged stress, and a review of the common causes of teacher stress. Next, it presents methods for reducing occupational stress through…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Evaluation Methods, Job Satisfaction, Measures (Individuals)
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