Original Research

Die verband tussen enkele dimensies van loopbaanankers, pospersepsie en gehalte van werklewe

A. M. G. Schreuder, J. Flowers
SA Journal of Industrial Psychology | Vol 17, No 2 | a526 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/sajip.v17i2.526 | © 1991 A. M. G. Schreuder, J. Flowers | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 19 June 1991 | Published: 20 June 1991

About the author(s)

A. M. G. Schreuder, Universiteit van Suid-Afrika, South Africa
J. Flowers, Universiteit van Suid-Afrika, South Africa

Full Text:

PDF (4MB)

Abstract

The relationship between certain dimensions of career anchors, job perceptions and quality of work life. The career anchors and job perceptions of a sample of 258 employees in various types of organizations (private, semistate and state) were examined. A significant link was found between the respondents' career anchors and corresponding job perception; after which a test for differences in quality of working life between the fit and non-fit group was carried out. It was only for those respondents whose dominant career anchor was job security that significant differences (p < 0,5) were found and the fit group had a significantly higher score. The implications of these findings on career planning for the individual and the firm are examined.

  Opsomming
Die loopbaanankers en pospersepsie van 'n steekproef van 258 werknemers in verskillende tipes organisasies (privaat, semi-staat en staat) is ondersoek. 'n Betekenisvolle verband is tussen die proefpersone se loopbaanankers en pospersepsie verkry, waarna vir verskille in gehalte van werklewe tussen die passings- en nie-passingsgroep getoets is. Dit is slegs by daardie respondente waar die dominante loopbaananker werksekuriteit is dat beduidende verskille (p < 0,05) gevind is en die passingsgroep 'n beduidende hoer telling behaal het. Die implikasies van die bevindings ten opsigte van loopbaanbeplanning vir die individu en onderneming word bespreek.


Keywords

Loopbaanankers; Pospersepsie; Gehalte van werklewe

Metrics

Total abstract views: 3452
Total article views: 2909


Crossref Citations

No related citations found.