Repository logo
Log In(current)
  1. Home
  2. Colleges & Schools
  3. Graduate School
  4. Doctoral Dissertations
  5. Predicting Paricipant Activity in a Development Program: The Roles of Personality and Performance
Details

Predicting Paricipant Activity in a Development Program: The Roles of Personality and Performance

Date Issued
May 1, 2004
Author(s)
Louis-Slaby, Maria Rose
Advisor(s)
Robert T. Ladd
Additional Advisor(s)
Michael C. Rush, David J. Woehr, J. Elaine Seat
Abstract

Development programs have become popular among today's managers. These programs generally involve various assessments aimed at providing participants with a broad overview of their own characteristics and performance levels in various categories. The goal of this feedback is to prompt developmental activity. In essence, a chief objective is to increase participant awareness of individual strengths and weaknesses and encourage them to enhance and exploit those areas in which they excel and improve upon areas of deficiency. In spite of that, some individuals enrolled in these types of development-oriented programs fail to actively engage in development and may simply expend time and energy refuting feedback or the benefits of such activities. The present study served as an initial step in an attempt to delineate reasons for differences in participant behaviors in developmental programs - why some pursue development and others fail to participate in developmental activity. Specifically, the roles of performance and personality were examined.

Disciplines
Industrial and Organizational Psychology
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Major
Industrial and Organizational Psychology
Embargo Date
May 1, 2004
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

Louis_SlabyMariaRose_2004_OCRed.pdf

Size

939.53 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

b2353cb7cd38ab9adc47b5dd6712ded5

Built with DSpace-CRIS software - Extension maintained and optimized by 4Science

  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
  • Send Feedback
  • Contact
  • Libraries at University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Repository logo COAR Notify