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Human Resources Management

Attendance-Absenteeism

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Recognizing Good Attendance: A Longitudinal Quasi-Experimental Field Study, S E. Markham, Dow Scott, G Mckee Dec 2001

Recognizing Good Attendance: A Longitudinal Quasi-Experimental Field Study, S E. Markham, Dow Scott, G Mckee

Dow Scott

Three motivational theories (need, goal, and reinforcement) suggest that recognition programs should increase employee attendance. A 1-year, quasi-experimental field study of absenteeism was conducted at 4 manufacturing plants with a total 1,100 employees. The study compared a public recognition program for improving work attendance with 3 types of controls. The personal recognition treatment showed (a) significant decreases ranging from 29% to 52% for each quarter's baseline assessment, and (b) significant decreases when the control groups showed no decrease. Employees had favorable perceptions of the public recognition program.


Teacher Absenteeism In Secondary Education, Dow Scott, J C. Wimbush Dec 1990

Teacher Absenteeism In Secondary Education, Dow Scott, J C. Wimbush

Dow Scott

Teacher absenteeism is a serious problem for school systems. Using an existing model of attendance behavior as a guide, attitudinal, demographic and absenteeism data from 265 secondary teachers were examined. Canonical correlation analysis revealed that absenteeism among teachers was significantly related to distance to work, gender, job involvement, and overall job satisfaction.


Gender Differences In Absenteeism, Dow Scott, E L. Mcclellan Dec 1989

Gender Differences In Absenteeism, Dow Scott, E L. Mcclellan

Dow Scott

Investigated employee characteristics and attitudes of 243 female and 105 male secondary school teachers to determine if men and women had different reasons for being absent. Although women perceived some work related factors differently than men and took substantially more days off than men, their absence occurrences were not significantly different. In addition, an employee's age and attitude toward pay were the only factors that exhibited a gender-related impact on absenteeism. Perceived role conflict and job involvement were significantly related to absenteeism for men and women.


Employee Attendance: Good Policy Makes Good Sense, Dow Scott, S E. Markham, G S. Taylor Dec 1986

Employee Attendance: Good Policy Makes Good Sense, Dow Scott, S E. Markham, G S. Taylor

Dow Scott

No abstract provided.


Rewarding Good Attendance: A Comparative Study Of Positive Ways To Reduce Absenteeism, Dow Scott, S E. Markham, R W. Robers Dec 1984

Rewarding Good Attendance: A Comparative Study Of Positive Ways To Reduce Absenteeism, Dow Scott, S E. Markham, R W. Robers

Dow Scott

No abstract provided.


Controlling Absenteeism: A National Study Of Union And Non-Union Differences, S E. Markham, Dow Scott Dec 1984

Controlling Absenteeism: A National Study Of Union And Non-Union Differences, S E. Markham, Dow Scott

Dow Scott

No abstract provided.


An Examination Of Conflicting Findings Between Job Satisfaction And Absenteeism: A Meta Analysis., Dow Scott, G S. Taylor Dec 1984

An Examination Of Conflicting Findings Between Job Satisfaction And Absenteeism: A Meta Analysis., Dow Scott, G S. Taylor

Dow Scott

This study, which applied meta-analytic procedures, found a significant negative relationship between certain facets of job satisfaction and absenteeism. Findings suggest that sampling errors, scale inadequacies, and the use of different measures of job satisfaction and absence are the reasons for inconsistencies in previous empirical research that examined the relationship between job satisfaction and absenteeism.


The Job Satisfaction/Absenteeism Relationship: Gender As A Moderating Variable, Dow Scott, D A. Mabes Dec 1983

The Job Satisfaction/Absenteeism Relationship: Gender As A Moderating Variable, Dow Scott, D A. Mabes

Dow Scott

No abstract provided.


An Analysis Of Absenteeism Cases Taken To Arbitration: 1975-1981, Dow Scott, G S. Taylor Dec 1982

An Analysis Of Absenteeism Cases Taken To Arbitration: 1975-1981, Dow Scott, G S. Taylor

Dow Scott

An analysis of 146 absentee discharge cases taken to arbitration reveals that arbitrators decide such cases in a fairly consistent manner. Content analysis of each case, supplemented with nonparametrical statistical analyses, indicate that eight factors appear to have the greatest influence on the arbitral decision: (1) the reason given by the employer for the discharge; (2) the existence of a formal absence control policy; (3) the consistent application of this policy; (4) employee knowledge of the attendance policies; (5) management adherence to its own policies; (6) the use of progressive discipline; (7) the employee's length of service with the employer; …


A Human Resource Planning Approach For Reducing The Cost Of Absenteeism, Dow Scott Jan 1982

A Human Resource Planning Approach For Reducing The Cost Of Absenteeism, Dow Scott

Dow Scott

Although absenteeism rates can be reduced significantly in most organizations, it must be recognized that absenteeism is a legitimate employee benefit and will occur at some level despite control efforts. The author proposes that a human resource planning approach can substantially reduce the cost of absenteeism by staffing for predicted levels of absenteeism. There are three preconditions for such an approach: (1) absenteeism measures must be developed and attendance data collected: (2) the probability that jobs will be vacant must be calculated; and (3) a cost analysis for alternative strategies of filling job vacancies must be completed. Diagnostic instruments are …