Chapter 10: Keeping Women in Their Place?: The Joint Influence of Target Gender and Interpersonal Hierarchy Expectation on Contextual Performance Requirements
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Published:2013
Dan S. Chiaburu, Heather C. Kissack, Marianne Schmid Mast, 2013. "Keeping Women in Their Place?: The Joint Influence of Target Gender and Interpersonal Hierarchy Expectation on Contextual Performance Requirements", Received Wisdom, Kernels of Truth, and Boundary Conditions in Organizational Studies, Daniel J. Svyantek, Kevin T. Mahoney
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Individuals are hired because their competencies match requirements for a specific job or position. Yet task-related behaviors are not the only ones expected on the job. Increasingly, employees display nontask related behaviors, contributing to contextual performance (Borman & Motowidlo, 1993). Defined formally, contextual performance supports “the organizational, social, and psychological environment in which technical core must function” (Borman & Motowidlo, 1993, p. 73). Such behaviors are significant for the individual employees, provided that managers account for them when rating their subordinates’ overall performance and when providing subsequent rewards (Allen, 2006; Allen & Rush, 1998; Whiting, Podsakoff, & Pierce, 2008; Whiting, Maynes, Podsakoff, & Podsakoff, 2012), and given that they are consequential organizational outcomes (Podsakoff, Whiting, Podsakoff, & Blume, 2009).
