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What is an Attitude?. “An organized predisposition to respond in a favorable or unfavorable manner toward a specified class of objects” (Shaver, 1977) Position on a bipolar affective or evaluative dimension (Fishbein & Ajzen, 1975)
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What is an Attitude? • “An organized predisposition to respond in a favorable or unfavorable manner toward a specified class of objects” (Shaver, 1977) • Position on a bipolar affective or evaluative dimension (Fishbein & Ajzen, 1975) • Networks of interrelated beliefs that reside in long-term memory and are activated when the attitude object or issue is encountered (Tourangeau & Rasinksi, 1988)
Measuring Attitudes:Thurstone’s Equal Appearing Intervals (1928) • Create pool of belief items (~100) • ~300 judges rate favorability of items • Scale value of item = average rating • Exclude items with high variance • Final scale: ~20 evenly distributed items • Person checks items (s)he agrees with • Score = median value of checked items
Measuring Attitudes:Likert’s Summated Ratings (1932) • Create pool of belief items • Decide how to score each (+ or -) • exclude neutral or ambiguous items • Administer to relevant sample • bipolar SA (+2) to SD (-2) scale • Criterion of internal consistency • item-total correlations & Coefficient Alpha
Issues with Likert Scales • Ambiguity of SD responses • Women deserve same job opportunities as men • So use bipolar scales (“Women deserve…”) • Scaling is compensatory • 5 SA + 5 SD = 10 N = 5A + 5D • Include neutral midpoint? • How many anchors?
Measuring Attitudes:Guttman’s Scalogram (1944) • Create set of items that form a uni-dimensional hierarchy • Score = “highest” item person endorses • e.g., attitudes towards gambling: • Place bets with bookie • Gambling trips to Las Vegas • Bet on greyhounds/horses • Office football/basketball pools • Penny ante poker with friends • No-stakes wager with a friend
Measuring Attitudes:Osgood’s Semantic Differential Scale • Subjects rate items on bipolar adjectives: • good…………………………………bad • favorable ……………………unfavorable • like……………………………….dislike • Score = sum of responses to all items • Most direct measure of evaluation/affect
What is Job Satisfaction? • Spector: • “the degree to which people like their jobs” • “How people feel about their jobs and different aspects of their jobs” Work characteristics Job Satisfaction(s)
Porter (1961): Need Satisfaction Desired-Actual Minnesota Work Adjustment Model 20 “reinforcers” (based on Murray’s 12 needs) Locke (1976): Values “Job satisfaction results from appraisal of one’s job as attaining…one’s important job values” provided these values are congruent with basic needs Simple Discrepancy Models
Objective characteristics Perceived characteristics Needs/ Values Job Satisfaction(s)
March & Simon Evaluation of inducements/contributions ratio Labor market affects value of contributions Cornell Model: Outcomes vs. Expectations Evaluations of outcomes are affected by Frame of Reference (alternatives, past experience, economy) Hulin, Roznowski & Hachiya (1985) Frame of reference influences both contributions and inducements Frame of Reference Models
Objective characteristics Perceived characteristics Frame of Reference Needs/ Values Job Satisfaction(s)
Questioning the Situational View • A chink in the armor: are perceptions veridical with objective reality? • Social Information Processing model • Dispositional View
Alternative Models of JS:Social Information Processing Model Social construction of attitudes vs objective characteristics) Salancik & Pfeffer (1978) Roots in Schachter & Singer (1962) Attitude statements based on: Perception of affective components Social context cues Self-attributions about behavior Generalized Arousal Event JS Cues
Alternative Models of JS:Dispositional Approach • Staw & Ross (1985) • Surprising stability over time/situations • Staw, Bell & Clausen (1986) • Childhood temperament predicts adult JS • Arvey et al. (1989) • JS has hereditary component (30%)
Caveats re: Dispositional Approach • General questions about behavioral genetics • Gerhart (1987): Situation AND Disposition • Compared effects on current satisfaction of prior satisfaction, pay, job complexity • Job complexity had strongest effect • Why isn’t extrinsic satisfaction heritable? • Why is JS heritable? A JS gene?
Temperament and Job Satisfaction • Trait NA/PA may be key factor • Some reason to believe that it may have biological basis, and thus inheritable • Those high in NA are more likely to: • Notice negative stimuli • Evaluate stimuli in negative terms • Recall negative stimuli • Create interpersonal conflict dissatisfaction
Primacy of Affect or Judgment Weiss & Cropanzano (1996) Events Affect JS Weiss et al. (1999) Disposition Mood at work JS Brief (1998) Disposition Interpretations JS
Primacy of Affect or Judgment Brief & Weiss (2002) Interpretations JS Disposition Mood Fuller et al. (2003) Strain JS Stress events Mood
Attitudes and Behavior Attitude: Act Behavior Intent Behavior Subjective Norm Theory of Reasoned Action (Fishbein & Ajzen)
Attitudes and Behavior Behavior beliefs Attitude: Act Evaluation Behavior Intent Behavior Normative beliefs Subjective Norm Motivation to Comply Theory of Reasoned Action (Fishbein & Ajzen)
Attitudes and Behavior Behavior beliefs Attitude: Act Evaluation Behavior Intent Behavior Normative beliefs Subjective Norm Constraints Motivation to Comply Theory of Reasoned Action (Fishbein & Ajzen)