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Effects of social identity, network connectivity, and prior performance on career progression and resilience: A study of NCAA basketball coaches
by Halgin, Daniel, Ph.D., Boston College, 2009, 169 pages; AAT 3344938

Abstract (Summary)

This study was an investigation of the effects of social identity on career progression and career resilience. Particular attention was given to the predictive impact of social identity of membership in an identifiable professional sub-grouping. Using NCAA basketball coaches as an empirical setting, quantitative and qualitative analyses were conducted to predict the status of next employer for job seekers who voluntarily changed jobs (n = 282), and the employability resilience of job seekers who were fired (n = 151). Job seekers with the social identity of membership in an identifiable professional sub-grouping (in this empirical setting, defined as membership in a coaching family or coaching tree) were hired for positions with employers of higher status, and exhibited greater employability resilience than was the case for job seekers without such a social identity. Because membership in an identifiable professional sub-grouping signals concise information about the social identity of an individual above and beyond prior performance, network connectivity and status affiliations, it is theorized that individuals with such a social identity are more easily understood, more predictable, and are therefore more valuable in the labor market. Additional career benefits are accrued by individuals who claim their ascribed identity, and by individuals who have social identities characterized as relational actors. Recommendations for future research on social identity of membership in an identifiable professional sub-grouping are offered.

Indexing (document details)

Advisor:Borgatti, Stephen P.
Committee members:Bartunek, Jean,  Glynn, Mary Ann
School:Boston College
Department:Carroll School of Management
School Location:United States -- Massachusetts
Keyword(s):Careers, NCAA, Resilience, Social identity, Social network analysis, Career progression, Basketball coaches
Source:DAI-A 70/02, Aug 2009
Source type:Dissertation
Subjects:Management, Organizational behavior
Publication Number: AAT 3344938
ISBN:9781109050684
Document URL:http://proquest.umi.com/pqdlink?did=1679009731&Fmt=7&clientI d=79356&RQT=309&VName=PQD
ProQuest document ID:1679009731


 

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