Exploration of Organizational Citizenship Behavior (OCB) from academic and employee work-based perspectives: implications for OCB training and real world applications
thesis
posted on 2017-02-09, 05:21authored byClarke, Bianca Anna
A review of the Organizational Citizenship Behavior (OCB) literature identified several
concerns that have hindered the progress of OCB research. This included conceptual
disparity, the absence of a mutually agreed upon model, focus on scholar-based
perceptions, and the lack of practical initiatives that bridge the gap between OCB theory
and practice. In an effort to address these limitations, a series of progressive studies
were conducted.
Study one presented a qualitative thematic analysis of the conceptual similarities and
differences among 149 dimensional-definitions across 44 frameworks of OCB. Ten
themes of citizenship behavior were identified, namely, Helping, Sportsmanship,
Compliance, Conscientiousness, Loyalty, Innovation, Interpersonal Harmony,
Development, Participation, and Communication. This framework identifies the
significance of Innovation, Interpersonal Harmony and Communication within scholarly
perceptions of OCB. To continue the examination of employee perceptions of OCB and
determine whether academic conceptions are recognized in the field, an employee
perceptual framework of OCB was created. These understandings were united with
scholar-based perceptions and identified the conceptual similarities and differences that
exist between the literature and the field. Scholarly facets not recognized by employees
included Innovation, Sportsmanship, Communication, and to a lesser extent
Participation.
Study two explored the development of an OCB training intervention. This involved a
review of the FOR-training literature and creation of 45 written workplace scenarios
reflecting the specific forms of OCB and non-OCB. Examination of these scenarios
against scholarly conceptualizations of OCB across 31 organizational psychology postgraduate
students, academics, and consultants, underscored the ecological validity of the 10-themed conceptual model and short-listed a set of robust workplace scenarios for use
as stimulus material in future OCB training initiatives. Results also demonstrated that
individuals who are informed about the different types of citizenship behavior display
the ability to identify general instances of OCB and correctly discriminate between the
specific forms of OCB displayed in the workplace.
Paper three examined the benefit of incorporating a multi-dimensional framework of
OCB within the FOR-training protocol. Training was administered to 69 Australian
employees to determine whether FOR-training significantly enhances employee
recognition and discrimination of OCB and task performance, results in transfer
intention and knowledge maintenance over time, and positively influences employee
perceptions of and behavioral participation in citizenship behavior within the
workplace. A series of chi-squares, random effects logistic regressions, and qualitative
analysis demonstrated that basic exposure to citizenship behavior may be sufficient to
develop impressive levels of general OCB recognition in the workplace. Second, FOR training
significantly assists with the discrimination of some of the specific forms of
OCB including Sportsmanship, Compliance, and Conscientious behavior. Third,
employees demonstrate the ability to accurately recognize general and specific acts of
citizenship behavior over time, however, engaging in FOR-training is not associated
with enhanced levels of transfer intention. Finally, employees exposed to any level of
OCB training describe enhanced recognition of citizenship behaviours, active
experimentation in the workplace, positivity towards those who engage in OCBs, and
support for OCB training in the workplace.