A
Angie Lockwood
Researcher at University of Georgia
Publications - 10
Citations - 4052
Angie Lockwood is an academic researcher from University of Georgia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Maturity (psychological) & Test validity. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications receiving 3838 citations.
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Work and family research in IO/OB: Content analysis and review of the literature (1980–2002)
TL;DR: A review of 190 work-family studies published in IO/OB journals from 1980 to 2002 is presented in this paper, with a discussion of recurring themes in the literature and the identification of blind spots in the IO/O perspective on work and family.
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Predictors of success in the era of the boundaryless career
TL;DR: This article examined three classes of career competencies proposed as important predictors of success in the boundaryless career: perceived career satisfaction, perceived internal marketability, and perceived external marketability.
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A review of research methods in IO/OB work-family research.
TL;DR: Results support many of the criticisms of work-family research and suggest that scholars publishing WF research in industrial-organizational psychology and organizational behavior journals could make greater use of longitudinal and experimental research designs, gather more multisource data, and move beyond the individual level of analysis.
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Protégés’ and mentors’ reactions to participating in formal mentoring programs: A qualitative investigation
Lillian T. Eby,Angie Lockwood +1 more
TL;DR: Mentors and proteges from two formal mentoring programs were interviewed about the benefits associated with program participation, problems encountered in the program, and recommendations for program improvements as mentioned in this paper.
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Protégés negative mentoring experiences: construct development and nomological validation
TL;DR: In this article, two studies were conducted to operationalize the construct of negative mentoring experiences, establish content validity, and test theory-based predictions associated with a nomological network of related variables.