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Learning climate and work group skills in care work


Article Information:

Title:

Learning climate and work group skills in care work

Author(s):

Kristina Westerberg, Esther Hauer

Journal:

Journal of Workplace Learning

Year:

2009

Volume:

21

Issue:

8

Page:

581 - 594


ISSN:

1366-5626


DOI:

10.1108/13665620910996151

Publisher:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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Abstract:

Purpose – The overall aim of the present study was to investigate the learning climate and work group skills perceived by managers and their subordinates in the municipal elderly care, prior to a development project. The specific research questions were: Are managers' and their subordinates' perceptions of the learning climate related? and Does the manager's assessment of the work group skills correlate with the work group's perception of the learning climate?

Design/methodology/approach – A total of 12 managers and 130 of their subordinates were selected, and answered a questionnaire. The subordinates belonged to work groups with five to 19 care assistants working in elderly care. The majority of the participants were women (92 per cent). The mean age was 43 years old, range 20-63.

Findings – Results suggest that the perception of the learning climate has a correspondence between the organisational levels (managers and their subordinates) and that there is a correspondence between managers' ratings of work group skills, in particular skills for effectively managing change, and the work groups' perception of their learning climate, in particular decision autonomy and developmental and collaborative potentials. Research implications/limitations – The manager sample was small and from one single organisation.

Practical implications – The relations between the learning climate and the assessment of staff skills are important to the actions taken in order to facilitate workplace learning and development.

Originality/value – This study contrasted the managers' assessment of skills with their work groups' perceptions of learning climate, which is quite unusual in learning climate studies.

Keywords:

Elder care, Employees, Group dynamics, Learning, Managers, Skills, Sweden


Article Type:

Case study


Article URL:

http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/13665620910996151

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