hero image
Tammy  Fitzpatrick, Ph.D. - Saint Mary's University of Minnesota. Minneapolis, MN, UNITED STATES

Tammy Fitzpatrick, Ph.D.

Adjunct Associate Professor, M.A. in Human Resource Management | Saint Mary's University of Minnesota

Minneapolis, MN, UNITED STATES

Expertise: Leadership and Job Satisfaction

Social

Biography

Dr. Fitzpatrick is skilled in career development, conflict resolution, and executive coaching. Her Doctor of Philosophy is focused in industrial and organizational psychology. She has also worked in the banking and aerospace industries.

Areas of Expertise (6)

Leadership and Training / Development

Organizational Behavior

Job Satisfaction

Job Performance

Motivation

Organizational Development

Education (1)

Walden University: Ph.D., Industrial and Organizational Psychology 2013

Recent Articles (1)

The relationship between job satisfaction and psychological climate among community banking employees


Walden University, ProQuest Dissertations Publishing

Fitzpatrick, Tammy A.

2008 This study investigated the relationship between job satisfaction and psychological climate in a community bank, which may find a standard set of defined assessment tools useful in its strategic planning. Because much of the available research has been limited to domestic, non service sector organizations, community banks must generalize and interpret the results from limited materials to understand and manage risks associated with job satisfaction. Literature revealed that employees’ perception is critical to job satisfaction while addressing issues of skill variety, task identity, task significance, autonomy, and feedback. Using a conceptual framework based on the theories of job satisfaction and psychological climate, the research questions sought to identify the most pertinent dimensions. All 60 employees of a community bank participated in the study. Using a survey design, the variables of job satisfaction were measured by 83 items from the Job Diagnostic Survey, and the variables of psychological climate were measured by 60 items from the Perceived Work Environment. A quantitative analysis using descriptive statistics utilized a series of correlation, multiple regressions, and tests to analyze the data. The key results identified the most pertinent dimensions perceived by employees that best described their psychological work environment. Bank employees revealed that job responsibility best described their psychological work environment, whereas task significance and identity were important to job satisfaction. Decision making, pressure to produce, and performance reward were the least important dimensions. The implications for social change include providing bank management with a foundation that addresses the most pertinent dimensions of employees’ levels of job satisfaction as well as improving work environments to increase levels of job satisfaction.

view more


 Your profile is not published.

Contact