Performance management practices, employee attitudes and managed performance
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Date
2010-08-17
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Journal of Educational Management : Emerald.
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to establish the relationship between performance
management practices, employee attitudes and managed performance.
Design/methodology/approach – Using a disproportionate stratified purposive approach,
a sample of 900 employees was drawn from four public universities in Uganda.
Findings – The paper reveals that performance management practices and employee attitudes are
crucial for achievement of managed performance in public universities.
Research limitations/implications – This was a cross-sectional study that inherently has
common method biases. Such biases could be minimised with replication of the study using a
longitudinal study approach that would also unearth all salient issues that could have remained
untouched.
Practical implications – The paper emphasises the need for public universities to institutionalise
result-oriented relationships and adapt in the external hyper changing environment.
Originality/value – The paper calls for a new approach to managing employees in public
universities with increasing demand for university education and stakeholder interests in delivery of
cost-effective quality services.
Description
24 p. : ill. ;
Keywords
Performance management systems, Employee attitudes, Universities, Developing countries, Uganda
Citation
Kagaari, J., Munene, J. C., & Ntayi, J. M. (2010). Performance management practices, employee attitudes and managed performance. International Journal of Educational Management. https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/09513541011067683/full/pdf?title=performance-management-practices-employee-attitudes-and-managed-performance