Thursday, 7 February 2013

Counterdependence at Work Relationships With Social Support, Control Beliefs, and Self-Monitoring

an article by Irene Gianakos (Kent State University at Trumbull, Warren, USA) published in Journal of Career Development Volume 40 Number 1 (February 2013)

Abstract

Although styles of self-reliance theoretically arise from early attachments, other research suggests the influence of attachment operates indirectly through internalized but modifiable beliefs about the self and others.

The present study examined the relative contribution of parental attachment, social support perceptions, control beliefs, and self-monitoring in understanding workplace counter-dependence, a problematic style of self-reliance reflective of avoidant attachments.

Participants were 184 undergraduate students (mean age = 23.2 years) who worked an average of 29.2 hours per week.

As expected, the regression analysis identified perceptions about support, explanatory beliefs, and self-monitoring skills as significant predictors of counter-dependence, whereas parental attachment factors were not; collectively these significant predictors explained 41.5% of the variance.

The results suggest that difficulties with workplace counter-dependence may be ameliorated by interventions that target workers’ perceived deficiencies in the skill-linked predictors identified in this study.


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