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Cover image for Work motivation : past, present, and future
Title:
Work motivation : past, present, and future
Series:
The organizational frontiers series ; 27
Publication Information:
New York, NY : Routledge, 2008
Physical Description:
xxxv, 680p. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780805857450

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30000010197421 HF5549.5.M63 W674 2008 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This edited volume in SIOP's Organizational Frontiers Series presents the current thinking and research on the important area of motivation.Work Motivation is a central issue in Industrial organizational psychology, human resource management and organizational behavior. In this volume the editors and authors show that motivation must be seen as a multi-level phenomenon where individual, group, organizational and cultural variables must be considered to truly understand it. The book adopts an overall framework that encompasses "internal" - from the person - forces and "external" - from the immediate and more distant environment - forces. It is destined to challenge scholars of organizations to give renewed emphasis and attention to advancing our understanding of motivation in work situations.


Author Notes

Ruth Kanfer received her Ph.D. in 1981 from Arizona State University. She was a Post-Doctoral Fellow in Quantitative Psychology at the University of Illinois (1981-1983) and served on the faculty at the University of Minnesota (1984-1997). Since 1997, she has served as a Professor of Psychology at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her research interests are in motivation and self-regulation in the context of complex skill training, job performance, team performance, employee development, and job search and reemployment. She is author of over 60 articles and chapters on these topics, and is co-editor of Emotions in the Workplace (2002) and Learning, Motivation, and Methodology (1989). She has received several research awards for her work on motivation, including the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award (2007) and the William R. Owens Scholarly Achievement Award (2006) from the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology ), the Organizational Psychology Division Outstanding Publication of the Year from the Academy of Management (1989), and the Distinguished Scientific Award for an Early Career Contribution in Applied Research (1989) from the American Psychological Association. She served on the Academy of Management Board of Governors (2004-2007), and served or has served on nine journal editorial boards, including Journal of Applied Psychology, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Applied Psychology: An International Review, and Journal of Management.. Her research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Office of Naval Research, the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the National Institutes of Health, the Spencer Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Georgia Department of Labor, and private organizations. She is a Fellow in the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, the American Psychological Association and the American Psychological Society.

Gilad Chen is an Associate Professor of Management & Organization in the Robert H. Smith School of Business, at the University of Maryland. He received his doctoral degree in Industrial/Organizational Psychology from George Mason University in 2001. His research on work motivation, teams and leadership, and multilevel phenomena has appeared in such journals as Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Applied Psychology, Personnel Psychology, and Research in Organizational Behavior, and has been funded by U.S. Army Research Institute. He is a recipient of several research awards, including the 2007 Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology's Distinguished Early Career Contributions Award. He either serves or has served on the editorial boards of Academy of Management Journal, Applied Psychology: An International Review, Journal of Applied Psychology, and Journal of Management, and is currently serving as Associate Editor for the Journal of Applied Psychology.

Robert D. Pritchard received his Ph.D. in 1969 from the University of Minnesota. He is currently a Professor of Psychology and Management at the University of Central Florida. His primary interest is in motivation and in measuring and improving organizational performance. He has given workshops, symposia, and other presentations on his work in the US, Canada, England, the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, Finland, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Spain, the Czech Republic, Sweden, and Russia. He has received several research awards including the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology in 2002 for his work on motivation and performance. He is a Fellow in the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, the American Psychological Association and the American Psychological Society.

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Table of Contents

Series ForwardRobert D. Pritchard
ForewardLyman Porter
Preface and Acknowledgements
The Authors
Contributors
I Scientific Foundations
Chapter 1 The three C's of work motivation: Content, context, and changeRuth Kanfer and Robert D. Pritchard and Gilad Chen
Chapter 2 The measurement and analysis of motivationRobert E. Ployhart
Chapter 3 Motivation for what: The criterion questionReeshad Dalal and Charles L. Hulin
II Motivational Processes
Chapter 4 Goal choice and decision processesHoward J. Klein and James T. Austin and Joesph T. Cooper
Chapter 5 Goal striving and self-regulation processesJames M. Diefendorff and Robert G. Lord
Chapter 6 Self-regulation and multiple deadline goalsTerence R. Mitchell and Wendy S. Harman and Thomas W. Lee and Dong-Yeol Lee
III Proximal Environmental Influences
Chapter 7 Designing motivating jobs: An expanded framework for linking work characteristics and motivationSharon K. Parker and Sandra Ohly
Chapter 8 Motivation in and of work teams: A multi-level perspectiveGilad Chen and Celile Gogus
Chapter 9 Leadership processes and work motivationStephen J. Zaccaro and Katherine Hildebrand and Jonathan Nelson
Chapter 10 Organizational systems and employee motivationWendy R. Boswell and Alexander J.S. Colvin and Todd C. Darnold
IV Temporal and Distal Contextual influences
Chapter 11 Motivation to engage in training and career developmentDaniel C. Feldman and Thomas W. H. Ng
Chapter 12 Successful Navigation of Career Transitions: Implications for and from work motivation theoryConnie R. Wanberg and John Kammeyer-Mueller
Chapter 13 Non-work influences on work motivationEllen E. Kossek and Kaumudi Misra
Chapter 14 Socio-cultural influences on work motivationMiriam Erez
V Future prospects
Chapter 15 Essays from Allied Disciplines
Introduction
Making time for memory and remembering time in motivation theoryStephen M. Fiore
C The Social Context of Work Motivation: A Social-Psychological PerspectiveVerlin B. Hinsz
D Motivation and expertise at work: A Human Factors PerspectiveEduardo Salas and Katherine A. Wilson and Rebecca Lyons
E Motivation in health psychology: A Social-Cognitive PerspectiveJames E. Maddux
F Law and motivationGary L. Renz and Richard D. Arvey
G Work motivation: Insights from EconomicsBruce E. Kaufman
Chapter 16 Work Motivation: Forging New Perspectives and Directions in the Post-MillenniumRuth Kanfer and Gilad Chen and Robert D. Pritchard
Author Biographies
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