The influences of attachment style and implicit person theories on employee coaching needs
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Date
2019
Authors
Van Steenderen, Margaret
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Abstract
The purpose of this research is to learn more about what effects employees when it
comes to employee coaching, specifically if their attachment style and implicit person
theory would affect their coaching willingness and needs, predominantly within a South
African context.
Employee coaching is one on one coaching by a manager with their employees.
Theory and research have identified employee coaching as a potential key tool to drive
development, employee satisfaction and improve performance. This research has
drawn heavily on executive coaching literature with primary emphases on practical
implementation and outcomes for the executive as coachee. Employee coaching
literature places the manager as coach and the employee as coachee and therefore
entails different dynamics. However, less is known about the dynamics and choices
within the employee coaching relationship, such as, drivers of the employee’s desire
to be coached and perceived needs within coaching. This thesis seeks to address
these questions.
This thesis chooses two psychologically derived major drivers of employee willingness
to be coached and needs. The first antecedent is attachment theory which assesses
the individual’s foundational personal style of relationship forming and interaction
which is widely believed to be formed early in life. Attachment styles vary from secure
to insecure with various classifications. Theoretically, therefore, since employee
coaching involves a relationship including the potential for intimacy with an authority
figure theory suggests the attachment styles could play an important role. Implicit
person theory measures the extent to which a person believes people can change or
be changed. Since coaching is a developmental process, the employee’s belief that
he or she can change could be expected to again have an important effect on the
employee’s willingness to be changed and the type of coaching desired.
In order to address these research questions, a survey measuring attachment style,
implicit person theory, coaching needs and coaching willingness was devised and
distributed electronically with 441 respondents. Have established factor structure
through reliability and confirmatory factor analyses, the main analyses employed
correlations and structural equation modelling. Attachment theory and implicit person
theory has some effect on employee coaching willingness and needs. These results
are presented along with recommendations and future research questions.
Description
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Commerce, Law and
Management, University of the Witwatersrand, in partial fulfilment of the
requirements for the degree of Master of Management in the field of
Business Executive Coaching, Johannesburg, 2019
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Citation
Van Steenderen, Margaret, (2019) The influences of attachment style and implicit person theories on employee coaching needs, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, https://hdl.handle.net/10539/28649