TY - JOUR
T1 - Moving beyond the pleasure principle
T2 - Within and between-occasion effects of employee eudaimonia within a school organizational climate context
AU - Burns, Richard Andrew
AU - Machin, Michael Anthony
PY - 2012/2
Y1 - 2012/2
N2 - Eudaimonic notions of well-being have increasingly figured in the well-being literature. The impact of such constructs in the organizational psychology literature has been more limited. Within an Organizational Health Research Framework (OHRF), we present findings that demonstrate the importance of eudaimonic, or psychological well-being (PWB), constructs which have been purported to be more temporally stable than affective dimensions of subjective well-being (SWB). Several hypotheses were tested on three school teacher samples from around the globe. Of particular emphasis, both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses indicated that the predictive model demonstrated that individual PWB is the strongest predictor of employees' positive affect while positive organizational climate was the strongest predictor of school morale and distress. In conclusion, we found support for the role of eudaimonic constructs within the OHRF, identifying independent effects for individual and organizational characteristics on employee well-being, and with differential effects on positive and negative domains of SWB.
AB - Eudaimonic notions of well-being have increasingly figured in the well-being literature. The impact of such constructs in the organizational psychology literature has been more limited. Within an Organizational Health Research Framework (OHRF), we present findings that demonstrate the importance of eudaimonic, or psychological well-being (PWB), constructs which have been purported to be more temporally stable than affective dimensions of subjective well-being (SWB). Several hypotheses were tested on three school teacher samples from around the globe. Of particular emphasis, both cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses indicated that the predictive model demonstrated that individual PWB is the strongest predictor of employees' positive affect while positive organizational climate was the strongest predictor of school morale and distress. In conclusion, we found support for the role of eudaimonic constructs within the OHRF, identifying independent effects for individual and organizational characteristics on employee well-being, and with differential effects on positive and negative domains of SWB.
KW - Employee well-being
KW - Organizational climate
KW - Psychological well-being
KW - School distress
KW - School morale
KW - Subjective well-being
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=83255186684&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jvb.2011.04.007
DO - 10.1016/j.jvb.2011.04.007
M3 - Article
SN - 0001-8791
VL - 80
SP - 118
EP - 128
JO - Journal of Vocational Behavior
JF - Journal of Vocational Behavior
IS - 1
ER -