Masters Theses

Date of Award

3-1988

Degree Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Science

Major

Nursing

Major Professor

Mildred Fenske

Committee Members

Sandra Thomas, Theresa Sharp

Abstract

This study compared the perceptions of interaction style of administrators of nursing and the Master's prepared nurses working with them at eight hospitals in Tennessee to investigate the relationship of perceptions to job satisfaction, role ambiguity, and role conflict of Master's prepared nurses. A significant difference was found between the measured perceptions of role ambiguity for Master's prepared nurses with perceptual congruence and those with perceptual noncongruence. The findings of this study revealed that perceptual congruence as constructed and operationalized for this study did not relate to the measured job satisfaction of Master's prepared nurses. Additionally, the data revealed higher significant relationships between role ambiguity and conflict and job satisfaction for Master's prepared nurses with perceptual congruence. Higher perceptions of both role ambiguity and role conflict correlated to lower job satisfaction levels, with role ambiguity' having the strongest relationship. The significance level was set at p<.05.

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