Genre
- Journal Article
Employee reactions to promotional examinations were investigated in 2 studies (N = 498 & 182, respectively) of police officers. Anxiety, motivation, and justice perceptions were examined as possible predictors of promotional exam performance and intentions to recommend the exam to others. Reactions to a promotional examination were significantly and differentially related to those criteria. Motivation predicted performance whereas justice perceptions predicted recommendation intentions. In Study 2, the role of cognitive processing was also investigated. Results indicated that candidate reactions predicted exam performance through cognitive processing mechanisms. Exam motivation facilitated cognitive processing, which resulted in higher levels of exam performance. In contrast, exam anxiety exhibited both facilitative and debilitative cognitive processing effects.
McCarthy, Julie, University of Toronto-Management 1265 Military Trail, Toronto, ON, Canada, M1C 1A4, julie.mccarthy@rotman.utoronto.ca
United Kingdom
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Language
- English