Title of article
General mental ability and satisfaction with school and work: A longitudinal study from ages 13 to 48
Author/Authors
Wulff، نويسنده , , Cornelia and Bergman، نويسنده , , Lars R. and Sverke، نويسنده , , Magnus، نويسنده ,
Pages
11
From page
398
To page
408
Abstract
Although it has been proposed that general mental ability (GMA) may affect the adjustment process, few studies have examined the relation of mental ability to individualsʹ sense of satisfaction with school and work. The present study investigated the importance of mental ability for school and job satisfaction, using a Swedish sample of 298 men and 399 women, followed longitudinally from the age of 13 to middle age (43 years for women, and 48 years for men). Mental ability had a weak positive correlation with school satisfaction at age 13 but not at age 16, whereas a tendency was found for a negative relation to job satisfaction at the age of 26. Adolescent levels of mental ability were associated with greater intrinsic job satisfaction in middle age for both sexes, and greater extrinsic job satisfaction for men. Longitudinal structural equation modeling indicated that the effects of general mental ability on school and job satisfaction were mediated by school and work achievement, respectively. The same model fit both sexes.
Keywords
General mental ability , School satisfaction , Job Satisfaction , longitudinal , school achievement , work achievement
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Record number
2037507
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