Discriminant Validation of Measures of Job Satisfaction, Job Involvement, and Organizational Commitment

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Abstract

Discriminant validity of measures of job satisfaction, job involvement, and organizational commitment was empirically evaluated using data collected from a sample of 577 full-time employees of a 327-bed Veterans Administration Medical Center. The LISREL VI computer program was used to conduct a confirmatory factor analysis of items from measures of these three concepts and to evaluate relations between other job-related variables and the three attitudinal measures. Results of these analyses indicated that the measures of job satisfaction, job involvement, and organizational commitment assess empirically distinct concepts.

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Brooke, P. P., Russell, D. W., & Price, J. L. (1988). Discriminant Validation of Measures of Job Satisfaction, Job Involvement, and Organizational Commitment. Journal of Applied Psychology, 73(2), 139–145. https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-9010.73.2.139

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