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Person-organization congruence of high performance values in Australian universities

journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by Ann Lawrence
This study explores the applicability of the personal and organizational value clusters identified by Abbott, White & Charles, (2005) employing the McDonald & Gandz (1991) list of values to university settings. It examines the personal values of business students in two universities, their perception ofthe organizational values important to their university, and measures the extent to which the personal and organizational values are consistent with 'High Performance Work Systems '. Results provide support for individual and organizational values factors similar to those found by Finegan, (2000) and Abbott et al. (2005) and consistent with Schwartz s (1992) an-cultural values hierarchy. While usiness/commerce students rated their personal values as consistent with HPWS and the major pan-cultural values, this did not match their perception of the organizations' values. The implications of personal-organizational value incongruence on motivation, satisfaction, organizational commitment and effectiveness are discussed.

History

Journal

International journal of knowledge, culture & change management

Volume

6

Issue

4

Pagination

173 - 182

Publisher

Common Ground Publishing

Location

Altona, Vic.

ISSN

1447-9524

eISSN

1447-9575

Language

eng

Notes

Reproduced with the specific permission of the copyright owner.

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal