Working in the sky: a diary study on work engagement among flight attendants |
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Authors: | Xanthopoulou Despoina Bakker Arnold B Heuven Ellen Demerouti Evangelia Schaufeli Wilmar B |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Psychology, Department of Work and Organizational Psychology, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Woudestein, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. xanthopoulou@fsw.eur.nl |
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Abstract: | This study aims to gain insight in the motivational process of the Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) model by examining whether daily fluctuations in colleague support (i.e., a typical job resource) predict day-levels of job performance through self-efficacy and work engagement. Forty-four flight attendants filled in a questionnaire and a diary booklet before and after consecutive flights to three intercontinental destinations. Results of multilevel analyses revealed that colleague support had unique positive effects on self-efficacy and work engagement. Self-efficacy did not mediate the relationship between support and engagement, but work engagement mediated the relationship between self-efficacy and (in-role and extra-role) performance. In addition, colleague support had an indirect effect on in-role performance through work engagement. These findings shed light on the motivational process as outlined in the JD-R model, and suggest that colleague support is an important job resource for flight attendants helping them reach their work-related goals. |
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