Job Crafting Scale
The Job Crafting Scale measures the proactive, self-initiated changes employees make to their own jobs, a construct introduced by Amy Wrzesniewski and Jane Dutton in 2001. Where classic work-design theory treated jobs as fixed structures handed down by managers, job crafting reframes employees as active agents who reshape the task, relational, and cognitive boundaries of their work to make it more meaningful and engaging. The most widely used psychometric instrument, the Job Crafting Scale of Maria Tims, Arnold Bakker, and Daantje Derks (2012), operationalizes crafting within the Job Demands-Resources framework as four behaviors: increasing structural resources, increasing social resources, increasing challenging demands, and decreasing hindering demands. The scale yields a validated, multidimensional self-report measure whose factor structure and reliability have been established across samples and languages. It has become the standard tool for studying how bottom-up job redesign relates to engagement, performance, and well-being.
Исходная запись
Цитирование скопировано дословно из исходной записи метода. На его основании не делается никаких выводов о проверке на уровне утверждения.
- Wrzesniewski, A., & Dutton, J. E. (2001). Crafting a job: Revisioning employees as active crafters of their work. Academy of Management Review, 26(2), 179-201. · DOI 10.5465/amr.2001.4378011
- Tims, M., Bakker, A. B., & Derks, D. (2012). Development and validation of the job crafting scale. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 80(1), 173-186. · DOI 10.1016/j.jvb.2011.05.009
Курируемые утверждения
Утверждения сохранены в реестре доказательств, каждое со своей оценкой.
Этот вид не создает оценку утверждения, если в реестре ее нет.
Связанные методы
Сгенерировано из графа методов и показано как предложенные машиной связи — никаких выводов об утверждениях доказательств не делается.