Workplace civility training: understanding drivers of motivation to learn |
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Authors: | Benjamin M. Walsh Vicki J. Magley |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Management, University of Illinois at Springfield, Springfield , IL , USA;2. bwals2@uis.edu;4. Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs , CT , USA |
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Abstract: | AbstractTraining is recommended as an important human resource management (HRM) practice to prevent mistreatment and enhance civility, but little is known about what influences the effectiveness of civility training. The central aim of this study was to address how workgroup conditions influence employees' attitudes about civility training and motivation to learn, which previous research shows is a predictor of training outcomes. Predictors were posited to include psychological and workgroup climate for civility, and personal and ambient mistreatment experiences. These predictors were hypothesized to drive positive (training discrepancy) and negative (training skepticism) pre‐training attitudes, which in turn were expected to influence motivation to learn. Results suggest the influence of climate for civility and mistreatment experiences on motivation to learn is largely indirect via pre‐training attitudes. Training skepticism and training discrepancy have conflicting influences on motivation to learn. Findings provide an empirical basis for HRM professionals to maximize employee motivation to learn in their own civility interventions. |
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Keywords: | Workplace civility workplace incivility workplace mistreatment motivation to learn training |
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