The development and validation of a job crafting measure for use with blue-collar workers

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The development and validation of a job crafting measure for use with blue-collar workers. / Nielsen, Karina; Abildgaard, Johan Simonsen.

In: Work & Stress, Vol. 26, No. 4, 2012, p. 365.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nielsen, K & Abildgaard, JS 2012, 'The development and validation of a job crafting measure for use with blue-collar workers', Work & Stress, vol. 26, no. 4, pp. 365. <https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02678373.2012.733543>

APA

Nielsen, K., & Abildgaard, J. S. (2012). The development and validation of a job crafting measure for use with blue-collar workers. Work & Stress, 26(4), 365. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02678373.2012.733543

Vancouver

Nielsen K, Abildgaard JS. The development and validation of a job crafting measure for use with blue-collar workers. Work & Stress. 2012;26(4):365.

Author

Nielsen, Karina ; Abildgaard, Johan Simonsen. / The development and validation of a job crafting measure for use with blue-collar workers. In: Work & Stress. 2012 ; Vol. 26, No. 4. pp. 365.

Bibtex

@article{79cafcbab4d34237a69f0b6b81b855c5,
title = "The development and validation of a job crafting measure for use with blue-collar workers",
abstract = "Abstract Job crafting describes a set of proactive behaviours in which employees may engage to shape their work in order to minimize hindering job demands and maximize resources and challenging demands. Such behaviours may be particularly important among blue-collar workers whose jobs are characterized by poor working conditions and low well-being. We present the development and adaptation of a job crafting measure that may be used among blue-collar workers, based on an existing scale by Tims, Bakker, and Derks (2012) that was not specifically developed for blue-collar workers. We test the validity and reliability of the measure in a longitudinal study based on multiple source information from mail delivery workers in Denmark (N=362 at Time 1; N=408 at Time 2). Results indicate the presence of five job crafting dimensions: increasing challenging demands, decreasing social job demands, increasing social job resources, increasing quantitative demands and decreasing hindering job demands. These can be reliably measured with 15 items. The measure shows acceptable discriminant and criterion validity, and test-retest reliability. The findings extend the application of the original questionnaire. They also add to knowledge of the job crafting behaviours in which blue-collar workers engage and link them to well-being outcomes.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, job crafting, validation, well-being, questionnaire, scale development",
author = "Karina Nielsen and Abildgaard, {Johan Simonsen}",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "365",
journal = "Work and Stress",
issn = "0267-8373",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The development and validation of a job crafting measure for use with blue-collar workers

AU - Nielsen, Karina

AU - Abildgaard, Johan Simonsen

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Abstract Job crafting describes a set of proactive behaviours in which employees may engage to shape their work in order to minimize hindering job demands and maximize resources and challenging demands. Such behaviours may be particularly important among blue-collar workers whose jobs are characterized by poor working conditions and low well-being. We present the development and adaptation of a job crafting measure that may be used among blue-collar workers, based on an existing scale by Tims, Bakker, and Derks (2012) that was not specifically developed for blue-collar workers. We test the validity and reliability of the measure in a longitudinal study based on multiple source information from mail delivery workers in Denmark (N=362 at Time 1; N=408 at Time 2). Results indicate the presence of five job crafting dimensions: increasing challenging demands, decreasing social job demands, increasing social job resources, increasing quantitative demands and decreasing hindering job demands. These can be reliably measured with 15 items. The measure shows acceptable discriminant and criterion validity, and test-retest reliability. The findings extend the application of the original questionnaire. They also add to knowledge of the job crafting behaviours in which blue-collar workers engage and link them to well-being outcomes.

AB - Abstract Job crafting describes a set of proactive behaviours in which employees may engage to shape their work in order to minimize hindering job demands and maximize resources and challenging demands. Such behaviours may be particularly important among blue-collar workers whose jobs are characterized by poor working conditions and low well-being. We present the development and adaptation of a job crafting measure that may be used among blue-collar workers, based on an existing scale by Tims, Bakker, and Derks (2012) that was not specifically developed for blue-collar workers. We test the validity and reliability of the measure in a longitudinal study based on multiple source information from mail delivery workers in Denmark (N=362 at Time 1; N=408 at Time 2). Results indicate the presence of five job crafting dimensions: increasing challenging demands, decreasing social job demands, increasing social job resources, increasing quantitative demands and decreasing hindering job demands. These can be reliably measured with 15 items. The measure shows acceptable discriminant and criterion validity, and test-retest reliability. The findings extend the application of the original questionnaire. They also add to knowledge of the job crafting behaviours in which blue-collar workers engage and link them to well-being outcomes.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - job crafting

KW - validation

KW - well-being

KW - questionnaire

KW - scale development

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 365

JO - Work and Stress

JF - Work and Stress

SN - 0267-8373

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 44374581