Organizational behavior : improving performance and commitment in the workplace /
Jason A. Colquitt, Jeffery A. LePine, Michael J. Wesson
- Sixth Edition.
- New York, New York : McGraw-Hill Education, 2019.
- xxi, 585 pages : color illustrations ; 28 cm.
Revised edition of the authors' Organizational behavior, [2016].
Includes bibliographical references, glossary and indices.
PART 1 INTRODUCTION TO ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR: What Is Organizational Behavior? -- Job Performance -- Organizational Commitment -- PART 2 INDIVIDUAL MECHANISMS. Job Satisfaction -- Stress -- Motivation -- Trust, Justice, and Ethics -- Learning and Decision Making -- PART 3 INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS. Personality and Cultural Values -- Ability -- PART 4 GROUP MECHANISMS. Teams: Characteristics and Diversity -- Teams: Processes and Communication -- Leadership: Power and Negotiation -- Leadership: Styles and Behaviors -- PART 5. ORGANIZATIONAL MECHANISMS -- Organizational Structure -- Organizational Culture.
"Organizational Behavior 6th edition by Colquitt, LePine, and Wesson continues to offer a novel approach using an integrative model and roadmap to illustrate how individual, team, leader, and organizational factors shape employee attitudes, and how those attitudes impact performance and commitment. This model reminds students where they are, where they've been, and where they're going. They include two unique chapters on job performance and organizational commitment. Those topics are critical to managers and students alike, and represent critical outcomes in OB. Each successive chapter then links back to those outcomes, illustrating why OB matters in today's organizations"-- "Why did we decide to write this textbook? Well, for starters, organizational behavior (OB) remains a fascinating topic that everyone can relate to (because everyone either has worked or is going to work in the future). What makes people effective at their job? What makes them want to stay with their employer? What makes work enjoyable? Those are all fundamental questions that organizational behavior research can help answer. However, our desire to write this book also grew out of our own experiences (and frustrations) teaching OB courses using other textbooks. We found that students would end the semester with a common set of questions that we felt we could answer if given the chance to write our own book. With that in mind, Organizational Behavior: Improving Performance and Commitment in the Workplace was written to answer the following questions"--