Title: Summer 2003 Research Grant Results Presentation
1Summer 2003 Research Grant Results Presentation
- Robert C. Hoell, Ph.D., SPHR
- Dept.of Management, Marketing, Logistics
- College of Business Administration
2Proposal Title
- THE DEVELOPMENT OF SCALES APPROPRIATE FOR THE
MEASUREMENT OF INTERPERSONAL TRUST AND
PARTICIPATION ATTITUDES OF UNION MEMBERS
3Abstract from Original Study
- Employees working in unionized environments have
the unique position of having their loyalty
courted by both their employer and their union.
Some employees form a loyalty to both while some
remain uncommitted to one or the other, or in
some instances, to neither. There is no strong
research evidence that explains these
differences. - It is hypothesized that interpersonal trust may
explain these varying levels of employee
commitment to their employer and their union.
Initial findings indicate that individuals with
low levels of trust do not form as high a degree
of commitment as those who have high levels of
trust.
4Hypotheses from Original Study (these are still
valid for next iteration)
- Union Members with greater degrees of
Interpersonal Trust will exhibit higher degrees
of Union Commitment than members with lesser
degrees of Interpersonal Trust.
- Union Members with positive attitudes towards
participation will exhibit higher degrees of
Union Commitment than members with less positive
attitudes towards participation.
5Abstract from Current Study
- This research will establish scale items best
attuned to the measurement of union member
commitment, trust, and participation attitudes.
Existing scales that measure trust and
participation have too strong of an
organizational theme. These pro-management
scales are confounded by the degree of
commitment union members hold. Respondents with
high union commitment view these scales as
representing a managerial view and answer them
from a negatively biased perspective. Through
rewording, factor analysis, and re-sampling, new
scale instruments and survey questions, devoid of
any perceived managerial influence, can be
developed.
6One Step Further
- The data led to mixed results. Further
inspection of the data, through factor analysis,
yielded additional mixed results. - It was determined that a second order factor
analysis, conducted through SEM and the Lisrel
Software Package, would be necessary before
rewording and restructuring could continue. - Todays presentation will focus on the
re-analysis of the original data and the
conclusions that can be drawn from the second
order technique.
7Trust Scales Used
- For this study, general measures of interpersonal
trust were used. John Rotter (1967) developed a
25-item scale that measures general trust in
others. Entitled Interpersonal Trust Scale the
items measure overall trust with 5-point Likert
responses. The other scale used for this study
is the Trust in People scale developed by The
Survey Research Center in 1969. Again, the scale
measures overall trust by an individual in other
individuals. Three items are used, with a forced
choice response to each. One of the two choices
to each question indicates a trusting response.
Both scales are additive, with higher scores
indicating greater degrees of Interpersonal Trust.
8Participation Scales Used
- Four distinct measures of Employee Participation
were used in the survey. Participativeness is
measured with a 12 item scale (? 0.85)
developed by Verma and McKersie, 1987. This
scale measures the desired participation in
decision-making and the level of say employees
want. The Interest in Work Innovation Index was
developed in 1965 by Martin Patchen. This is a 6
item scale, with reported test-retest
reliabilities from .87 to .92. The scale
measures the degree to which respondents are
interested in finding new ways of doing things at
their job. Â Job Involvement is measured with a
scale modified by Lorence and Mortimer from
original scales developed by Quinn and Staines in
the mid-70s. It consists of 7 items measuring
effort and involvement attitudes. A locus of
control scale, developed by Spector in 1988,
attempts to overcome the limitations of the
original developed by Rotter (1966). The Work
Locus of Control Scale uses concepts and beliefs
found in work settings, as opposed to the more
general Rotter items.
9Union Commitment Scales Used
- Union commitment was originally defined with 48
items (Gordon, et al., 1980) 30 of these items
have been identified as most salient in capturing
aspects of commitment. Reliability for the scale
was not reported in the original article, but
additional research using subsets of the original
scale has shown alpha values generally stable
0.83 (Iverson Kuruvilla, 1995), 0.85 (Martin,
Magenau Peterson, 1982), and 0.88 (Sherer
Morishima, 1989). Four different factors within
the scale have been identified union loyalty,
responsibility to the union, willingness to work
for the union, and belief in unionism. Fields
Thacker (1992) reported the alphas on each of
these four factors 0.89 for Loyalty to the
Union, 0.72 for Responsibility to the Union, 0.80
for Willingness to Work for the Union, and 0.82
for Belief in Unionism.
10Demographic Results
Age Range 23 to 65 Average 45.41
Gender 112 Male 19 Female
Ethnicity 110 White, 10 Black, 7 Hispanic
Education 55 beyond a High School degree
11Structural Equation Model Conceptual Diagram
WLC
UNLOYAL
PARTIC
Trust
UNRESP
IT
UnCommit
JI
PartAtt
UNWORK
TIP
UNBELIEF
WII
12Basic Model with T-Values(non-significant values
in red)
Chi-Square53.17, df32, P-value0.01078
WLC
7.06
4.77
UNLOYAL
7.33
PARTIC
8.26
3.66
Trust
5.08
0.77
UNRESP
IT
UnCommit
6.40
-1.80
7.31
-2.53
-4.65
JI
UNWORK
PartAtt
7.77
-3.60
TIP
0 15.
UNBELIEF
4.45
WII
3.34
-6.67
13Structural Model with T-Values
0.00
Trust
0.77
Union Commit- ment
0.00
3.58
Partic- pation Attitudes
-2.53
0.00
14Results
- SEM Fit Indices
- Root Mean Square Residual (RMR) 0.198
- Standardized RMR 0.0745
- Goodness of Fit Index (GFI) 0.930
- Adjusted Goodness of Fit Index (AGFI) 0.879
15What to do now?
- Obviously, mixed results, yet a strong model.
- Scale items were examined for bias in the wording
some bias noticed. - Data were factor analyzed
16Factor Analysis
- PCA was conducted on the 10 scales
- Eigenvalues of 1 were specified
- Rotation method Promax with Kaiser Normalization
17SCALES FACTORS
Dependent Variables
Union Loyalty Responsibility to Union Willingness to Work for Union Belief in Unionism 5 2 1 1
Independent Variables
Trust Trust in People Interpersonal Trust Participation Attitudes Work Locus of Control Participativeness Job Involvement Work Innovation Index 1 8 5 2 2 2
188 Factor Example(Interpersonal Trust)
191 Factor Example(Willingness to Work for the
Union)
20Again, now what???
- Possibility of an underlying factor
- One of the Big Five or something from the 16
PF? Extroversion, for instance? - Second Order Factor Analysis identified as a
possible investigatory tool.
21Second Order FA Results
22Results
- Goodness of Fit Statistics
- Degrees of Freedom 32
- Minimum Fit Function Chi-Square 53.355 (P
0.0103) - Root Mean Square Residual (RMR) 0.198
- Standardized RMR 0.0745
- Goodness of Fit Index (GFI) 0.930
- Adjusted Goodness of Fit Index (AGFI) 0.879
23Structural Model with T-Values
24Further Steps
- How do these results steer further development of
scales? - Should the scales be re-worded, or dumped and
re-written from scratch? - Is SEM just witchcraft anyway???