Job satisfaction and gender identity of women managers and non-managers.

Agnieszka Lipińska-Grobelny, Katarzyna Wasiak

Department of Social Psychology, Labour and Occupational Consultation, Institute of Psychology, University of Łódź, Łódź, Poland.

Journal Article: International Journal of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health 01/2010; 23(2):161-6. DOI: 10.2478/v10001-010-0015-6

Abstract

This work investigates different cognitive aspects of job satisfaction (co-workers, supervisor, job content, working facilities, organization and management, opportunities for development, income), positive and negative affect at work and their relations to gender role orientation of women occupying managerial and non-managerial positions.
The sample of 122 women (60 managers and 62 non-managers) completed a battery of instruments such as: the Bem Sex Role Inventory, the Job Description Inventory by Neuberger and Allerbeck and the Job Affect Scale by Brief et al.
Most women managers represented androgynous and masculine types, while women non-managers belonged to androgynous and feminine types. Moreover, women with various degrees of sex-typing showed positive and negative affect at work. The most satisfied with income were masculine women managers, the least--feminine women non-managers.
These results may be applied in designing of motivational instruments to enhance job effectiveness and to eliminate unproductive behaviours such as absenteeism, high staff turnover.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

Allerbeck
 
Bem Sex Role Inventory
 
facilities
 
feminine types
 
Job Affect Scale
 
job content
 
Job Description Inventory
 
job effectiveness
 
job satisfaction
 
managerial
 
masculine types
 
motivational instruments
 
non-managerial positions
 
positive
 
sex-typing
 
staff turnover
 
various degrees
 
women managers
 
women non-managers
 
work investigates different cognitive aspects