Testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: A context-based approach

Building on and extending the proximal-distal theoretical framework of motivation, we investigated the relevance of the role and effectiveness of psychosocial safety climate (PSC) and social support as contextual factors in assisting faculty members’ and university students’ cognitive and emotional...

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Main Authors: Michelle Chin Chin Lee, Judith Lunn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Cogent Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2019.1685929
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spelling doaj-3a2f0ded229b40fc8386d8389502d0da2021-09-06T14:06:28ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Psychology2331-19082019-01-016110.1080/23311908.2019.16859291685929Testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: A context-based approachMichelle Chin Chin Lee0Judith Lunn1Sunway UniversityLancaster UniversityBuilding on and extending the proximal-distal theoretical framework of motivation, we investigated the relevance of the role and effectiveness of psychosocial safety climate (PSC) and social support as contextual factors in assisting faculty members’ and university students’ cognitive and emotional resources. Three hundred and fifty faculty members (N = 175) and university students (N = 175) from 37 departments of 15 universities in Malaysia participated in this dual-rater multi-level study. Data analysis involved Hierarchical Linear Modeling. Individual-level analyses showed that social support influences faculty members’ and university students’ job resources. Cross-level analyses showed that PSC was effective in providing job resources to faculty members, but only to university students’ emotional resources. Between PSC and social support, PSC showed lesser influence as compared to social support. There was a stronger influence of PSC and social support on the provision of emotional resources to both faculty members and university students as compared to cognitive resources. In conclusion, positive organizational factors such as PSC and social support are important in affecting faculty members and university students’ job resources, especially emotional resources.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2019.1685929psychosocial safety climatesocial supportjob resourcesfaculty memberuniversity studentmalaysia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michelle Chin Chin Lee
Judith Lunn
spellingShingle Michelle Chin Chin Lee
Judith Lunn
Testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: A context-based approach
Cogent Psychology
psychosocial safety climate
social support
job resources
faculty member
university student
malaysia
author_facet Michelle Chin Chin Lee
Judith Lunn
author_sort Michelle Chin Chin Lee
title Testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: A context-based approach
title_short Testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: A context-based approach
title_full Testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: A context-based approach
title_fullStr Testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: A context-based approach
title_full_unstemmed Testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: A context-based approach
title_sort testing the relevance, proximal, and distal effects of psychosocial safety climate and social support on job resources: a context-based approach
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Psychology
issn 2331-1908
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Building on and extending the proximal-distal theoretical framework of motivation, we investigated the relevance of the role and effectiveness of psychosocial safety climate (PSC) and social support as contextual factors in assisting faculty members’ and university students’ cognitive and emotional resources. Three hundred and fifty faculty members (N = 175) and university students (N = 175) from 37 departments of 15 universities in Malaysia participated in this dual-rater multi-level study. Data analysis involved Hierarchical Linear Modeling. Individual-level analyses showed that social support influences faculty members’ and university students’ job resources. Cross-level analyses showed that PSC was effective in providing job resources to faculty members, but only to university students’ emotional resources. Between PSC and social support, PSC showed lesser influence as compared to social support. There was a stronger influence of PSC and social support on the provision of emotional resources to both faculty members and university students as compared to cognitive resources. In conclusion, positive organizational factors such as PSC and social support are important in affecting faculty members and university students’ job resources, especially emotional resources.
topic psychosocial safety climate
social support
job resources
faculty member
university student
malaysia
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2019.1685929
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