• Title/Summary/Keyword: OCB의 수행동기

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Motives of Organizational Citizenship Behavior : comparison between OCBO & OCBI (조직시민행동의 하위차원별 수행동기 비교)

  • Kim, Kyoung Seok;Lee, Jei Young
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.13 no.11
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    • pp.699-713
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    • 2013
  • This study has three purposes. Firstly, we try to extract the types of the motives of OCBO & OCBI instead of global OCB. Secondly, we compare the types of the motives OCBO & OCBI and those of the motives of global OCB. Finally, using another set of P-sample, we try to find out whether the four types of the motives of OCB found in the study of Kim & Lee(2013) could be found once again. The findings are as follows. First, we found the four types of the motives of OCBO, and three the types of the motives of OCBI. Second we found some similarities and differences at the same time between the types of OCBO, OCBI, & global OCB. Third, except the instrumentality-based type, three of the four types found in the study of Kim & Lee(2013) reappeared in this study. In conclusion, these findings suggest that OCBO & OCBI, the sub-dimensions of OCB, have their own distinctive natures respectively.

Motives of Organizational Citizenship Behavior: the Application of Q-methodology (조직시민행동(OCB)의 수행동기: Q방법론의 적용)

  • Kim, Kyoung Seok;Lee, Jei-Young
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.400-411
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    • 2013
  • OCB(organizational citizenship behavior) is a employee behavior that goes above and beyond the call of duty, that is discretionary and not explicitly recognized by the employing organization's formal reward system, and that contributes to organizational effectiveness. In a word, OCB has great potential as a organizational slack. As such, researchers have been showing great interest in the antecedents of OCB, and as a result, now we can meet so many antecedents of OCB from individual level variables to group or organizational level variables that are said to be important in explaining OCB. Additionally each of these variables is known to have its own sound logic and statistically significant effect on OCB. However the results of these studies are so fragmented that researchers have a great difficulty in drawing some meaningful or coherent conclusions. In this context, we try to applicate Q-methodology to find more coherent way of explaining the motives of OCB, and briefly speaking, we find four types of the motives of OCB, that is norm-based, instrumentality-based, trait-based, and avoidance-based type. Among these the last avoidance-based type is especially interesting, because we can't find any remarks on this type in the previous studies. The paper ends with suggestions for future research directions. We expect that these suggestions could be a foundation on which more developed and coherent OCB theories stand. We don't see this approach supplanting earlier efforts; rather we believe this can offer more detailed explanation in addition to those provided by other approaches.

The effect of sports participation on leader effectiveness and subordinate outcomes: Focused on the military organization (스포츠 참여가 리더 효과성 및 구성원 직무수행에 미치는 영향: 군 조직을 중심으로)

  • Byun, Gukdo;Na, Yoonseon;Lee, Soojin;Ku, Heegon
    • Journal of the Korea Academia-Industrial cooperation Society
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    • v.19 no.5
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    • pp.331-345
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    • 2018
  • Sports participation can contribute to organization members' work-life balance and work motivation in order to increase performance. Based on the achievement motivation theory, this study tested the effect of sports participation on leaders' effectiveness and employees' performance. Data was collected from 213 leaders and subordinates in the South Korean army. Results indicated that leader effectiveness mediated the positive relationship between sports participation of leaders and subordinates' outcomes, such as task performance and OCB. We also found that sports participation of subordinates moderated the positive relationship between leader effectiveness and subordinates outcomes (i.e., task performance and OCB). These findings further suggest that sports participation plays an important role for leaders and subordinates to increase leader effectiveness and in/extra-role behaviors.