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Is Autonomy Always Beneficial for Work Engagement? A Six-year Four-Wave Follow-Up Study

Work engagement is expected to result from job resources such as autonomy. However, previous results have yielded that the autonomy–work engagement relationship is not always particularly strong. Whereas previous longitudinal studies have examined this relationship as an average at a specific point...

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Autores principales: Seppälä, Piia, Mäkikangas, Anne, Hakanen, Jari J., Tolvanen, Asko, Feldt, Taru
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Scandinavian Society for Person-Oriented Research 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7842623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33569149
http://dx.doi.org/10.17505/jpor.2020.22043
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author Seppälä, Piia
Mäkikangas, Anne
Hakanen, Jari J.
Tolvanen, Asko
Feldt, Taru
author_facet Seppälä, Piia
Mäkikangas, Anne
Hakanen, Jari J.
Tolvanen, Asko
Feldt, Taru
author_sort Seppälä, Piia
collection PubMed
description Work engagement is expected to result from job resources such as autonomy. However, previous results have yielded that the autonomy–work engagement relationship is not always particularly strong. Whereas previous longitudinal studies have examined this relationship as an average at a specific point in time, this study examined whether this relationship is different within individuals from one time to another over the years. Furthermore, experiences of work engagement are expected to affect how employees benefit from autonomy, but no studies have so far investigated whether the initial level of work engagement affects the autonomy–work engagement relationship. This study aimed to first identify the different kinds of longitudinal relationship patterns between autonomy and work engagement, and then to investigate whether the identified relationship patterns differ in terms of the initial mean level of work engagement. The four-wave study was conducted among Finnish managers (n = 329) over a period of six years. Multilevel regression mixture analysis identified five relationship patterns. Four of the patterns showed a positive predictive relationship between autonomy and work engagement. However, the relationship was statistically significant in only one of these patterns. Furthermore, when the initial mean level of work engagement was high, autonomy related more strongly to work engagement. However, an atypical pattern was identified that showed a negative association between autonomy and work engagement. In this pattern, the mean level of work engagement was low. Consequently, autonomy may not always enhance work engagement; sometimes this relationship may even be negative.
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spelling pubmed-78426232021-02-09 Is Autonomy Always Beneficial for Work Engagement? A Six-year Four-Wave Follow-Up Study Seppälä, Piia Mäkikangas, Anne Hakanen, Jari J. Tolvanen, Asko Feldt, Taru J Pers Oriented Res Articles Work engagement is expected to result from job resources such as autonomy. However, previous results have yielded that the autonomy–work engagement relationship is not always particularly strong. Whereas previous longitudinal studies have examined this relationship as an average at a specific point in time, this study examined whether this relationship is different within individuals from one time to another over the years. Furthermore, experiences of work engagement are expected to affect how employees benefit from autonomy, but no studies have so far investigated whether the initial level of work engagement affects the autonomy–work engagement relationship. This study aimed to first identify the different kinds of longitudinal relationship patterns between autonomy and work engagement, and then to investigate whether the identified relationship patterns differ in terms of the initial mean level of work engagement. The four-wave study was conducted among Finnish managers (n = 329) over a period of six years. Multilevel regression mixture analysis identified five relationship patterns. Four of the patterns showed a positive predictive relationship between autonomy and work engagement. However, the relationship was statistically significant in only one of these patterns. Furthermore, when the initial mean level of work engagement was high, autonomy related more strongly to work engagement. However, an atypical pattern was identified that showed a negative association between autonomy and work engagement. In this pattern, the mean level of work engagement was low. Consequently, autonomy may not always enhance work engagement; sometimes this relationship may even be negative. Scandinavian Society for Person-Oriented Research 2020-09-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7842623/ /pubmed/33569149 http://dx.doi.org/10.17505/jpor.2020.22043 Text en © Person-Oriented Research https://person-research.org/journal/ Authors of articles published in Journal for Person-Oriented Research retain the copyright of their articles and are free to reproduce and disseminate their work.
spellingShingle Articles
Seppälä, Piia
Mäkikangas, Anne
Hakanen, Jari J.
Tolvanen, Asko
Feldt, Taru
Is Autonomy Always Beneficial for Work Engagement? A Six-year Four-Wave Follow-Up Study
title Is Autonomy Always Beneficial for Work Engagement? A Six-year Four-Wave Follow-Up Study
title_full Is Autonomy Always Beneficial for Work Engagement? A Six-year Four-Wave Follow-Up Study
title_fullStr Is Autonomy Always Beneficial for Work Engagement? A Six-year Four-Wave Follow-Up Study
title_full_unstemmed Is Autonomy Always Beneficial for Work Engagement? A Six-year Four-Wave Follow-Up Study
title_short Is Autonomy Always Beneficial for Work Engagement? A Six-year Four-Wave Follow-Up Study
title_sort is autonomy always beneficial for work engagement? a six-year four-wave follow-up study
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7842623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33569149
http://dx.doi.org/10.17505/jpor.2020.22043
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