Author:
O'Shea Deirdre,Kirrane Melrona
Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of the paper is to focus on personal and social background factors as potential channels for the transmission of work related attitudes in young adults. The paper aims to examine the extent to which gender, parental job type, job status, and education, as well as school experience, influence the development of attitudes towards work and family life.Design/methodology/approachThe study comprised a quantitative (questionnaire based) survey with a sample of 782 final year undergraduate students attending various third level institutions in Ireland and the USA.FindingsThe results indicated that individuals who had grown up in traditional mixed families had more positive attitudes towards balancing work and home roles than did those who had grown up in traditional single earner families. Father's educational level also emerged as a significant factor in the career‐family attitudes of the participants.Research limitations/implicationsThe results of this research indicate that young people have developed attitudes towards managing the work/family interface on entering the workforce, which they acquire through a social learning process. Limitations included the cross‐sectional nature of the design and future longitudinal research is needed.Practical implicationsOrganizations and managers need to be aware of the well‐developed attitudes of new entrants in order to address early issues of psychological contract and person‐organizational fit, which have an impact on career success and career management.Originality/valueThe findings of the paper break new ground on the role of social learning on the formation of attitudes towards managing the work‐family interface. Such attitudes proceed to inform behavioral patterns and decisions in the harmonious management of the two domains.
Subject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Management Science and Operations Research,Applied Psychology,Social Psychology
Reference153 articles.
1. Ali, S.R. and Saunders, J.L. (2006), “College expectations of rural Appalachian youth: an exploration of social cognitive career theory factors”, The Career Development Quarterly, Vol. 55, pp. 38‐51.
2. American Association of University Women (1999), Gender Gaps: Where Schools Still Fail our Children, American Association of University Women Educational Foundation, Washington, DC.
3. Aschaffenburg, K. and Maas, I. (1997), “Cultural and educational careers: the dynamics of social reproduction”, American Sociological Review, Vol. 62, pp. 573‐87.
4. Ballen, J. and Moles, O. (1994), Strong Families, Strong Schools: Building Community Partnerships for Learning, US Department of Education, Washington, DC, September.
5. Ballout, H.I. (2007), “Career success: the effects of human capital, person‐environment fit and organizational support”, Journal of Managerial Psychology, Vol. 22 No. 8, pp. 741‐65.
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献