Assessing the effect of management education on vocational behaviour
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University of Pretoria
Abstract
The study investigated the effect of post-graduate management education, viz., Master
of Business Administration, Master of Business Leadership and Specialised Master’s
programmes, on the vocational behaviour of candidates. Vocational behaviour was
operationalised by five indicators, viz., career decision-making self-efficacy, vocational
identity, work identity, career commitment and vocational interest/personality. These
indicators fit into the categories of vocational choice e.g., theories of occupational interest and
their measurement, and vocational decision-making process; and vocational adjustment e.g.,
career commitment, all of which underpin vocational behaviour research. This study used
Holland’s Typology (1985) as the theoretical model. A prospective causal-comparative design
was used to address the research questions. Phase One of the research entailed a cross-sectional
study involving post-graduate management students in various programmes. A within- and
between-subjects design was employed. Discriminant Function Analysis (DA) established that
the Enterprising personality type was the best predictor of both the Enterprising type (E-type)
and Social type (S-type) environments in South Africa. Holland’s (1985) fourth working
assumption, “Behaviour is determined by an interaction between personality and environment”
(p. 4), was not fully supported by the current study. Person-Environment fit (P-E fit) did not
predict vocational behaviour; however, t-test results established significant within and between
group differences in vocational behaviour as a function of P-E fit. Moreover, it was established
that incongruence is not always associated with negative outcomes; similarly, congruence is
not always linked to positive outcomes. The Phase Two study was intended to examine
whether management education could catalyse psychological behaviour change. However,
exposure to management education did not lead to changes in students’ vocational behaviour.
Furthermore, congruence (P-E fit) did not moderate the effect of the academic environment on
the vocational behaviour of the students. In this regard, the hypothesised model for Phase Two
study was not supported. However, the Phase Two study hypothesized model is an original
model which could benefit from being tested using a large sample (more specifically an
identical sample at Time 1 and Time 2 data collection phases). Furthermore, this longitudinal
research should be carried out on a national level across all universities, business and
governance schools. Research funding would be required to execute this project on a large
scale.
Description
Thesis (PhD (Industrial and Organisational Psychology))--University of Pretoria, 2021.
Keywords
UCTD, Management, Education, Holland's Typology, Congruence, Vocational behaviour
Sustainable Development Goals
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