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Decent Work’s Association With Job Satisfaction, Work Engagement, and Withdrawal Intentions in Australian Working Adults

Peter McIlveen, P. Nancey Hoare, Harsha N. Perera, Chris Kossen, Louisa Mason, Shannon Munday, Carolyn Alchin, Allison Creed, Nicole McDonald

2020Journal of Career Assessment50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The present research is focused on the measurement properties of the Decent Work Scale (DWS) in Australia and adds to the cumulative evidence of the measure’s international utility for psychological research into the role of work in people’s lives. The study contributes new evidence via a survey of a sample of workers ( N = 201) who completed the DWS and criterion measures of career-related factors including job satisfaction, work engagement, and withdrawal intentions. Correlated factors, higher order, and bifactor models were tested using confirmatory factor analysis. All models were satisfactory and the bifactor model evinced preferable fit. The DWS Values Congruence subscale predicted all criterion measures. Workers’ incomes and ratings of their occupations’ prestige had no main effects or interaction effect on the DWS subscales. Recommendations for future research include testing the DWS’s relations with measures of mental health which are known correlates of career-related outcomes.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyWork engagementJob satisfactionConfirmatory factor analysisScale (ratio)Mental healthSample (material)Social psychologyIndustrial and organizational psychologyWork (physics)Clinical psychologyStructural equation modelingEngineeringMechanical engineeringQuantum mechanicsChemistryPsychotherapistMathematicsPhysicsChromatographyStatisticsWorkplace Health and Well-beingEmployment and Welfare StudiesJob Satisfaction and Organizational Behavior
Decent Work’s Association With Job Satisfaction, Work Engagement, and Withdrawal Intentions in Australian Working Adults | Litcius