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Job Satisfaction among Senior and Junior Academic Staff: A Technological Assessment from Malaysia
Author(s) -
Sevendor Khor@ Bibi Florina Abdullah,
Jehangir Bharucha
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of innovative technology and exploring engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2278-3075
DOI - 10.35940/ijitee.h7455.078919
Subject(s) - stratified sampling , job satisfaction , psychology , ambivalence , medical education , institution , organisation climate , sociology , social psychology , medicine , social science , pathology
The academic profession is one of the most ambivalent among the highly educated occupations (Morey 1992). Academic staff job satisfaction and academic staff retention is two related factor which has an effect on school effectiveness (Noordin and Jusoff, 2009). The present study investigates the different ways in which junior and senior academicians view the relation between job satisfaction and the organizational climate in an academic institution in Malaysia. This study adopts a quantitative research methodology. The data was collected through a structured questionnaire circulated among 168 lecturers follows the technique of stratified random sampling. The study suggests that there is a difference in the way senior and junior academics perceive on the organizational climate and gives several recommendations in this regard

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