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THE EFFECTIVENESS OF AN ORGANIZATIONAL‐LEVEL ORIENTATION TRAINING PROGRAM IN THE SOCIALIZATION OF NEW HIRES
309
Citations
43
References
2000
Year
Orientation TrainingHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesOrganizational SocializationEmployee AttitudeManagementHuman Resource DevelopmentOrganizational PsychologyEmployee RelationEmployee LearningSocial IdentitySocial SkillsOrganizational CommitmentApplied Social PsychologySocialization Content DimensionsOrganizational CommunicationSociologyInterpersonal RelationshipsBusinessEmployee Engagement
This quasi‐experimental field study examined the impact of attending a voluntary, organizational‐level new employee orientation training program on organizational socialization. Six content dimensions of socialization were measured before and 1 to 2 months following orientation training for a sample of 116 new employees in a variety of occupations. Results revealed that employees attending the orientation training were significantly more socialized on 3 of the 6 socialization content dimensions (goals/values, history, & people) than employees who did not attend the training. Employees attending the orientation training also had significantly higher levels of affective organizational commitment than nonattendees, a relationship that was fully mediated by the socialization content dimensions, primarily goals/values, and history.
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