Publication | Closed Access
What Is Important on the Job? Differences Across Gender, Perspective, and Job Level<sup>1</sup>
20
Citations
15
References
2010
Year
Workplace PsychologyJob PerformanceEducationHuman Resource ManagementWorkplace StudyOrganizational BehaviorGender DisparityEmployee AttitudeGender IdentityGender StudiesManagementOrganizational PsychologyWork AttitudeFeedback InstrumentJob AnalysisJob SatisfactionBehavioral SciencesGendered ContextOrganizational CommunicationWorkforce DevelopmentHigher Level PositionsBusinessJob Competency DimensionsGender Divide
The importance ratings of job competency dimensions on a 360‐degree feedback instrument were examined. We hypothesized that men (incumbents and bosses) would rate agentic behaviors higher in importance than would women, and that women (incumbents and bosses) would rate communal behaviors higher in importance than would men. Differences were found for men and women across rating sources and across job level (organizational position). The present findings suggest that men and women incumbents view different factors as important for their jobs and that people in higher level jobs place more importance on agentic behaviors than do those in lower level positions, and people in lower level jobs place more importance on communal behaviors than do those in higher level positions.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1