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      Citizenship Behavior at the Team Level of Analysis: The Effects of Team Leadership, Team Commitment, Perceived Team Support, and Team Size

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      The Journal of Social Psychology
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          The authors investigated citizenship behavior at the team level of analysis by examining 71 change management teams, teams that are responsible for implementing organizational change. The authors collected data at an automotive-industry firm in the mid-Atlantic United States using a questionnaire methodology and an examination of company records. Team leader behavior, team commitment, and perceived team support all had large effects on team citizenship behavior, whereas team size had a small-to-negligible effect.

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          Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests

          Psychometrika, 16(3), 297-334
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            PERCEIVED ORGANIZATIONAL SUPPORT AND LEADER-MEMBER EXCHANGE: A SOCIAL EXCHANGE PERSPECTIVE.

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              Feeling good-doing good: a conceptual analysis of the mood at work-organizational spontaneity relationship.

              Five forms of organizational spontaneity are described (helping co-workers, protecting the organization, making constructive suggestions, developing oneself, and spreading goodwill). Organizational spontaneity is compared with the seemingly analogous constructs of organizational citizenship behavior and prosocial organizational behavior. Based on a selective review of the literature, a multilevel model of spontaneity is presented. Positive mood at work is a pivotal construct in the model and posited as the direct precursor of organizational spontaneity. Primary work-group characteristics, the affective tone of the primary work group, affective disposition, life event history, and contextual characteristics are proposed to have direct or indirect effects, or both, on positive mood at work. Motivational bases of organizational spontaneity also are described. The model and its implications are discussed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Journal of Social Psychology
                The Journal of Social Psychology
                Informa UK Limited
                0022-4545
                1940-1183
                June 2004
                June 2004
                : 144
                : 3
                : 293-310
                Article
                10.3200/SOCP.144.3.293-310
                15168430
                a2bf7b17-14b0-4b3f-99b9-14319b929b5a
                © 2004
                History

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