Qiwei Zhou, Yujie Shi, Quan Li, Jih-Yu Mao, Lingyue Zhou
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The notion of learning leading to job crafting and subsequently enhancing job performance is quite established. However, a deeper investigation into the effects of learning from success/failure on approach/avoidance job crafting and subsequent job performance, and how certain cultural contexts render these effects more or less salient is lacking. We conducted a two-wave survey study on 214 unique supervisor-employee dyads. The results show some differential effects of learning from success/failure on approach/avoidance job crafting, indicating that experiences gained from success and failure, to a certain extent, lead to different job crafting. Organizational rational culture strengthens the positive relationship between learning from failure and avoidance job crafting, but has a statistically nonsignificant effect on the relationship between learning from success and approach job crafting. Organizational group culture strengthens the positive relationship between learning from success and approach job crafting and weakens the positive relationship between learning from failure and avoidance job crafting. These findings have nuanced implications for the learning, organizational culture, and job crafting literature.
期刊介绍:
"Applied Psychology: An International Review" is the esteemed official journal of the International Association of Applied Psychology (IAAP), a venerable organization established in 1920 that unites scholars and practitioners in the field of applied psychology. This peer-reviewed journal serves as a global platform for the scholarly exchange of research findings within the diverse domain of applied psychology.
The journal embraces a wide array of topics within applied psychology, including organizational, cross-cultural, educational, health, counseling, environmental, traffic, and sport psychology. It particularly encourages submissions that enhance the understanding of psychological processes in various applied settings and studies that explore the impact of different national and cultural contexts on psychological phenomena.