Publication | Closed Access
The impact of perceived group success-failure on motivational beliefs and attitudes: A causal model.
363
Citations
59
References
1994
Year
Customer SatisfactionGroup PhenomenonOrganizational CharacteristicSocial PsychologyEducationSocial InfluenceHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyEmployee AttitudeCausal RelationshipManagementPerceived Group Success-failureWork AttitudeStructural Equation ModelingMotivational BeliefsCausal ModelSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesMotivationGroup InteractionOrganizational CommitmentCommitment ModelApplied Social PsychologyTheoretical RelationshipGroup WorkGroup Counseling
Two models describing the theoretical relationship among the constructs of perceived group success-failure, individual and collective levels of job-specific efficacy and outcome expectancy, satisfaction, and organizational commitment were developed. Model 1 proposed that the causal relationship between group success-failure and subsequent attitudinal variables (satisfaction and organizational commitment) is completely mediated by efficacy and outcome expectancy variables. The second model proposed a direct causal link from perceived group success-failure to the attitudinal variables and omitted questionable causal paths from personal efficacy and collective outcome expectancy to the attitudinal variables. The competing models were subjected to structural equation path model analysis. The second model produced an adequate fit between theory and data. Implications for organizations are discussed.
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