Individual diversity: age diversity and health outcomes? Agenda • Health and psychosocial work? • Chapter 6: brief summary • Aging workforce: numbers and figures • What is age? • Different operationalisations • Recent studies l Chapter: De Lange et al. 2006; l De Lange et al. (2003-2008); Kooij, De Lange, Jansen & Dikkers, 2007, 2008; Bal, De Lange, Jansen & Van der Velde, 2008;Fresh new results) Summarizing • Diversity (management) and process models • Cultural identity, group diversity issues • Part 1 Research proposal and teamwork has started • today: new introduction and 3 types of methods (results can also be included, but not necessary). Next week update with results and discussion. • Guest speaker ideas Guest speakers: website (http://diversity.lucarne.nl/) Causes Work disability (Europe) What is the relation between work and mental health? Chapter 6 l 6 psychosocial factors and gender or race diversity: • Work load and pace (women and minorities in relatively more high strain or lower status jobs) • Role stressors (multiple roles and gender differences) • Job content (work schedule; irregular shift work, flextime and telecommunicating) • Career security factors (temporary or contract status) • Interpersonal relations (e.g. sexual harrassment, racism and discrimination) De Lange et al. (2003) l Literature research: 45 studies based on ≥ 2 measures l Longitudinal survey study (TNO Arbeid): -1789 employees, 34 different companies -4 measures between 1994-1997 (= longitudinal research) Measures? Editor Website Psychological & Work Aging? B A C K G R O U N D Why focus on age differences? l Baby boom generation constitutes a large and increasing percentage of the work population l Traditional safety net of funded (early) retirement is being withdrawn in many countries l Netherlands: current cabinet proposals make it difficult to retire before 63 l Career development older workers has not been studied extensively Numbers and figures Europe Dutch population US data Bureau of Labor Statistics showing the size of the workforce over age 55 (the left scale is in thousands). Complex construct “Age or aging can better be portrayed as a multi-dimensional process that is not easy to capture within one single definition, and refers to many changes in biological, psychological as well as social or even societal functioning across time” (Birren & Birren, 1990; Jansen, 1993; Kanfer & Ackerman, 2004; Sterns & Miklos, 1995). Age Age differences? l Older workers are plagued by negative stereotyping l Age and health/well-being: physical health is declining, but not the mental and psychological health l Age and work characteristics: different age groups value different job aspects; also in expectations (psychological contracts) l Few studies explicitly examine age differences in the relation between work characteristics and well-being; De Lange et al. 2006,2007) age differences, but not different relations across time Psychological contracts Rousseau (1989): “The individual beliefs regarding the terms and conditions of a reciprocal exchange agreement between that focal person and another party.” l Perceived obligations l Obligation fulfillment Meta-analysis: Bal, De Lange et al. (2007) l K=94 studies l Psychological contract breach -> outcomes l Age moderates relationships Age differences in PC content? Bal, De Lange et al. (2008) l Older workers have lower expectations concerning development l Older workers respond differently to organizational inducements compared to younger workers. Chapter 1 (De Lange et al., 2006) Five different approaches (De Lange et al., 2006; Sterns and Doverspike, 1989) • Chronological approach: based on the respondent’s chronological or calendar age. The term "older worker" may refer to workers from age 40 to 75, depending on the purpose of the organization as well as the needs of the worker (Collins, 2003; Stein & Rocco, 2001). • Performance-based or functional approach: recognizes individual variation in abilities and functioning at all ages, measurement of aging should be based on objective functional measures (such as one’s physical health status or cognitive ability). Providing a better explanation for possible intra- and inter-group diversity compared to calendar age Five different approaches • Psychosocial approach: based on social or self perceptions of the “older worker”. Subjective age: (i) how old the person feels, looks and acts, (ii) with which age cohort the person identifies, and (iii) how old the person desires to be (Kaliterna, Larsen, & Brkljacic, 2002, p. 40). Social perception: relative age, age attitudes, beliefs or norms applied to an individual with respect to an occupation, company or society, and stereotypes about certain age groups. • Organizational approach assumes that age and tenure are related, and that effects of aging are often confounded by the effects of tenure, and vice versa (Sterns & Doverspike, 1989). Example: (i) how many years of working experience do you have in your current position? (job tenure). Nonetheless, organizational age may also refer to the career stage of a worker, skill obsolescence and age norms. Five different approaches • Life span approach: is based on elements of the aforementioned approaches, but emphasizes more the complex behavioral changes at any point in the life cycle. This complex approach, can be measured by variables like family status or economic constraints, but also by the dynamics between the indicators of all aforementioned approaches to measure aging Aging and work motivation? Review of Kooij, De Lange, Jansen & Dikkers (in press): Empirical as well as conceptual papers: -Chronological age: N=5 -Functional age: N=9 -Psychosocial age: N=9 -Organizational age: N=12 -Life span age:N=8 Age is proxy measure l What are relevant process variables? Examining life span, self-regulation, and P_E fit theories: *Job change hypothesis (Wright & Hamilton, 1987) *Socio-emotional selectivity theory (Carstensen, 1995 ) *Regulatory focus theory (Higgins, 1997) *Selection Optimization Compensation theory (Baltes, Staudinger and Lindenberger, 1999) Job change hypothesis Wright and Hamilton (1978) l Due to experience, seniority and skills, the selective group of active older workers will have obtained a relatively better person-environment fit, and higher level occupations with more job control compared to their younger colleagues Socio-emotional selectivity theory l individuals will select goals in accordance to their perceptions of the future as being limited or open-ended (Lang & Carstensen, 2002). l younger generations perceive time as open ended (holding a “time since birth” perspective) and will be especially motivated by growth or knowledge-related goals (new information or social interactions) that can be useful in the more distant future. l Older generations perceive time as more constraint (holding a “time till death” perspective), and will be more motivated by achieving short-term emotion-related goals, such as deepening one’s existing relations. l Because retirement is approaching, work-related future perspectives decrease for older workers (Carstensen et al., 1999), and older workers may therefore look for more emotional instead of learning-related aspects in their work environment. Regulatory focus theory Self-regulation refers to the process in which people seek to align their behaviours with appropriate goals or standards. According to the regulatory focus theory of Higgins (1997; 1998; 2000) there are two motivational or self-regulatory systems, labelled as promotion versus prevention, that focus on different underlying needs (growth and development versus safety and security). Selection Optimization Compensation l maximization of gains and minimizations of losses becomes more salient as people age, because of the loss of biological, mental as well as social reserves across the life span (Higgins, 1997, 1998; Bajor & Baltes, 2003) l According to the SOC model the allocation of resources for so-called “growth or promotion” goals will decrease with age, whereas maintenance and regulation of “loss or prevention” goals will increase with age. Selection Optimization Compensation Self-regulatory time based perspective (De Lange, 2007) 63+ workers (De Lange et al., 2008) N=172 (mean age 68.99; Sd=3.16) Age-aware practices effective? Kooij, Jansen, Dikkers & De Lange (2008) l HRM outcomes or work-related attitudes: - affective commitment - continuance commitment - satisfaction - perceived organizational support - intention to stay l Age: - calendar age - organizational tenure Method: Meta-analysis l Search resulted in k=38 studies Results: • Positive association between employee experience of HR practices and work-related attitudes • Ambiguous association between age and employee experience of HRM • Age and tenure significantly influence the relation between employee experience of HR meta-practices and work-related attitudes • Important to take a life-span perspective • Changing context: growing individualization and declining meaning of institutions (boundaryless careers) • Aging most be portrayed as a positive development (more idiosyncratic approach and less stereotypical views) • Intergenerational issues are important to consider • Personnel policies should be aligned to individual age-related needs and affinities • Explanatory aging models and interdisciplinary research needed • More attention to conceptualization of the aging construct and age-aware HRM policy More information? l http://www.tilburguniversity.nl/faculties/fsw/departments/HRS/SGM/ Want to know more? l http://www.rug.nl/gmw/faculteit/medewerkers/objecten/824?lang=en