Predicting Faculty Member’s Work Engagement in Indonesia: Testing the Role
of Optimism, Perceived Organizational Support and Self-efficacy
Aditya Nanda Priyatama, Muhamad Zainudin
and Seger Handoyo
Faculty of Psychology, Airlangga University, Surabaya, Indonesia
Keywords: Work engagement, perceived organizational support, self-efficacy, and optimism
Abstract: One of the influential human resources on the quality development of higher education in Indonesia is the
faculty member. A faculty member’s role, is to achieve the objective of the national education—to educate
the nation and improve the quality of cultured and civilized Indonesians. A faculty member’s contribution
for the higher education in Indonesia becomes important if it is done effectively with the appropriate
behavior. Not only in the quantity, but also on the direction of the effort, the characteristics within the
faculty member, the effort or willingness to complete a task, and many other things supported by the higher
education institution becomes significantly meaningful for the success of a faculty member’s performance.
Therefore, each faculty member has to identify each of their responsibility, performance, and be able to
measure their own success indicators. One of the factors that may improve the performance of an
organization is through looking at how far the faculty members’ engagement is. A number of studies related
to engagement are the perceived organizational support and optimism. This study aimed at seeing some
psychological constructs related to the perception of organizational supports and optimism has an influence
on faculty member’s engagement by using self-efficacy mediator variable on a state university’s faculty
members in Surakarta. The sample used in this research are 393 faculty members of Universitas Sebelas
Maret Surakarta. Data analysis used Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) with Lisrel 8.70 program. The
results of the analysis showed a fit model and there was a significant influence on the perceived
organizational support and optimism on faculty members’ engagement by the mediation of self-efficacy.
This indicated that self-efficacy was significant mediator to the perception of organizational support and
optimism with faculty members’ engagement. Thus, self-efficacy became essential in improving faculty
members’ engagement. This study affirmed self-efficacy as significant mediator in improving faculty
members’ engagement to organization
1 INTRODUCTION
One of the human resources that has an influence on
the quality development process of higher education
institutions in Indonesia is the faculty member. The
faculty member is one of the essential components
that has the role to achieve the objectives of the
national education—to educate the nation and able
to improve the quality of civilized Indonesians.
Following the Law No. 14 of 2005 on school
teachers and faculty members, it is explained that
faculty members are a professional lecturer and
scholar with the main task to transform, develop,
and disseminate knowledge, technology, and arts
through education, research, and community
development or what are usually called as the three
pillars of higher education.
To achieve organizational success, an
appropriate effort is needed, to maintain the human
resources within the organization. One of the
possible efforts is engagement. Engagement is an
individual’s obedience toward the organization, in
relation to the vison, mission, and the organization’s
objectives on the work process. Work engagement in
a faculty member is built through process; it takes a
long time and high commitment from the leaders
and the individuals. To achieve that, a leader’s
consistency in mentoring the employees and faculty
members is required. In creating work engagement,
an organization’s leader is expected to have certain
competences. Some of the competences are
communication technique, feedback giving
technique on anything that has been done, and
performance appraisal technique (McBain, 2007).
Priyatama, A., Zainudin, M. and Handoyo, S.
Predicting Faculty Member’s Work Engagement in Indonesia: Testing the Role of Optimism, Perceived Organizational Support and Self-efficacy.
DOI: 10.5220/0008588903230329
In Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Psychology in Health, Educational, Social, and Organizational Settings (ICP-HESOS 2018) - Improving Mental Health and Harmony in
Global Community, pages 323-329
ISBN: 978-989-758-435-0
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
323
A number of researches have studied the
characteristics of work context—discussing work
engagement. However, some personal characteristics
may also influence engagement. For instance, when
an individual is optimistic about the future,
engagement is more likely to occur (Xanthopoulou,
Bakker, Demerouti, & Schaufeli, 2007). Their study
discussed the roles of three personal resources (self-
efficacy, self-efficacy-based organization, and
optimism) in predicting employee engagement.
Their research results concluded that when
employees are effectively participating, they believe
they can fulfill given expectations in a series of
contexts. Moreover, participating employees believe
that they generally receive better results in their lives
(optimist) and meet their needs by participating in
the organizational roles. Furthermore, the three
personal resources also uniquely contribute to
explaining the variants within employee engagement
from time to time, beyond the impact of the work’s
source and the previous engagement level (Bakker,
Schaufeli, Leiter, & Taris, 2008).
The studies above show various relationships
with employee engagement. Current research makes
effort to look at several theoretical constructs that
can be related to work engagement; one of them is
psychological capital. Psychological capital is a
positive state of a person’s psychological condition,
which consists of the characteristics of self-efficacy
in all tasks given, optimism, hope, and resilience
(Luthans et al., 2007).
Schaufeli and Bakker (2003) explained that work
engagement is basically influenced by two factors,
job demand-resources (JD-R) model and
psychological capital. JD-R Model includes several
aspects, such as physical condition, social, and
organization, salary, career opportunity, supervisor
and colleague support, and performance feedback.
Meanwhile, psychological capital consists of self-
efficacy, optimism, hope, and resilience. This
research does not only seek for looking at the
influence of optimism and perceived organizational
support on work engagement, but also to look at
how far the factors related to self-efficacy can
mediate for the relationships between the two. Self-
efficacy is suspected to become mediator for a
maximum achievement for psychological capital in
acquiring employee engagement. Efficacy is widely
known to come from 4 proposed main sources
relevant to employee engagement. An individual
having high efficacy is identified from their
persistence in surviving, motivated by the belief on
their future success. Low efficacy arises to predict
burnout, the opposite of engagement. Therefore, it is
believed that the higher self-efficacy, the higher
employee engagement in an individual.
Eisenberger et al.’s (1986) study suggested that
perceived organizational support (POS) improved
the employee’s emotional bond with the
organization. In their research, Eisenberger et al.
(1986) defined POS as a form of employees’
certainty on the organization, that organization
appreciates the employees’ efforts and contributions,
and cares about their prosperity. The employees with
fulfilled socioemotional needs would be more
committed to the organization than those who did
not.
2 METHOD
2.1 Participants
Subjects of this research are 393 faculty members
from 10 faculties in Universitas Sebelas Maret
Surakarta, with the criteria of having minimum 2-
year experience working as faculty members at
Universitas Sebelas Maret. Samples in this research
are state university’s faculty member in Surakarta
with following characteristics: (1) faculty member
with the academic rank of minimum Asisten Ahli, (2)
work experience of minimum 2 years, (3) Age 30-65
years old.
2.2 Procedures
Tryout in this research by disseminating 400
booklets of research scales to 400 faculty members
working at Universitas Sebelas Maret Surakarta.
After approximately 3 months of the scale
dissemination, the researchers collected 375
exemplars of the scale, 20 of them were broken
scales due to incomplete filling, so the scales
available to be processed for discriminatory power
and reliability testing were 355 scales. After
reliability and validity tests, researchers acquired the
scale to be given to the 400 faculty members as
research subjects. Among 400 scales disseminated to
the faculty member, 7 were incompletely filled,
leaving 393 scales available to be analyzed. In other
words, the samples used in current research as
subjects were 393 faculty members.
2.3 Measures
Current research used 4 research scales, which are
perceived organizational support scale, work
engagement scale, self-efficacy scale, and optimism
ICP-HESOS 2018 - International Conference on Psychology in Health, Educational, Social, and Organizational Settings
324
scale. Perceived organizational support scale is a
psychology scale based on aspects referring to the
survey of perceived organizational support from
Eisenberger et al. (1986) with 29 items. Those
aspects are caring for prosperity, response to
difficulties, caring for work performance, and
response to ideas and opinions. One of the POS
scale items is “the University assists me to optimally
improve my achievement according to my ability”.
Work engagement scale used was adaptation of
UWES (Utrech Work Engagement Scale) with 17
items based on the aspects formulated by Schaufeli
et al. (2002), consisting vigor, dedication, and
absorption. One of the items for work engagement
scale is “I feel so ardent during my work”.
Self-efficacy scale was composed by using the
aspects formulated by Bandura (1977), such as:
magnitude, generality, and strength, which consisted
of 9 favorable items and 9 unfavorable items. One of
the items in self-efficacy scale is “I am certain of my
ability in completing my work, despite being under
work pressure. Optimism scale used in this research,
was arranged based on the optimism specifications
formulated by Seligman (1990) with 17 items using
the permanent, pervasiveness, and personalization
aspects. One of the items in optimism scale is I
believe that the problem I faced can be well-solved
in time”.
All four scales mentioned were Likert-model
scales, each having the characteristics of four
alternative responses separated into favorable and
unfavorable statements moving from very
inappropriate to very appropriate. On the POS scale
index, the discriminatory power of the items ranged
from 0.468 to 0.799 with the Cronbach alpha of
0.965. In work engagement scale index, the items’
discriminatory power ranged from 0.250 to 0.491
with the Cronbach alpha of 0.768. In self-efficacy
scale index, the items’ discriminatory power ranged
from 0.404 to 0.655 with the Cronbach alpha of
0.899. In optimism scale, the index of the
discriminatory power ranged from 0.348 to 0.625
with the Cronbach alpha of 0.874. By using the
confirmatory factor analysis, the scales’ items were
found to be valid and reliable as shown in the table
below
Table 1: Confirmatory Factor Analysis of Work
Engagement Scale.
Indicat
or
λ t
λ
1-ε t
1-ε
Note
E1 0.98 0.46 0,04 0.01 Valid,
reliable
E2 0.62 0.28 0.61 0.12 Valid,
reliable
E3 0.66 0.35 0.56 0.15 Valid,
reliable
Table 2: Confirmatory Factor Analysis Perceived
Organizational Support Scale.
Indicat
or
λ t
λ
1-ε t
1-ε
Note
POS1 0.79 18.61 0.37 12.49 Valid
,
reliab
le
POS2 0.87 21.53 0.24 11.10 Valid
,
reliab
le
POS3 0.93 24.20 0.13 7.62 Valid
,
reliab
le
POS4 0.91 22.92 0.18 9.67 Valid
,
reliab
le
Table 3: Confirmatory Factor Analysis Self-Efficacy
Scale.
Indicat
or
λ t
λ
1-ε t
1-ε
Note
EFI1 0.83 19.07 0.32 9.70 Valid,
reliable
EFI2 0.87 20.29 0.25 8.02 Valid,
reliable
EFI3 0.85 19.78 0.28 8.76 Valid,
reliable
Table 4: Confirmatory Factor Analysis Optimism Scale.
Indicator λ t
λ
1-ε t
1-ε
Note
OPT1 0.7
9
17.
08
0.3
8
9.47 Valid,
reliable
OPT2 0.8
8
19.
70
0.2
2
5.45 Valid,
reliable
OPT3 0.7
4
19.
58
0.4
5
10.77 Valid,
reliable
Predicting Faculty Member’s Work Engagement in Indonesia: Testing the Role of Optimism, Perceived Organizational Support and
Self-efficacy
325
From all four Confirmatory Factor Analysis, data
were found that to score manifest variable
(observed) that forms latent variable, it can be done
by testing structural coefficient that results from t-
test. Other than through the t-test, a standardized
solution was also used. The overall result of the t-
test and standardized solution shows that the items
were valid and reliable.
3 RESULT
Based on the performed model test, it shows that the
occurred model was declared fit. Some
characteristics for goodness of fit show that fit can
be seen on the fit test model table below:
Tabel 5: Goodness of fit model.
Statistics Value Fit
Criteria
Note
Chi Square 0.000 p>0.05 Not
fi
t
RMSEA 0.008 ≤0.1 Fit
GFI 0.92 >0.9 Fit
SRMR 0.045 <0.05 Fi
t
AGFI
0.88 >0.9 Not
fi
t
PGFI
0.62 >0.9 Not
fi
t
N
FI
0.98 >0.9 Fi
t
N
NFI
0.98 >0.9 Fi
t
PNFI
0.76 >0.9 Not
fi
t
CFI
0.98 >0.9 Fi
t
IFI
0.98 >0.9 Fi
t
RFI
0.97 >0.9 Fi
t
From the result of fit model above, it can be seen
that some criteria of fit model have been achieved,
which are on the criteria of RMSEA, GFI, SRMR,
NFI, NNFI, CFI, IFI, and RFI are indicated as fit. T-
test model can be seen from the figure below:
Figure 1: T-test Model.
Meanwhile, the standardized solution can be
seen from the figure below:
Figure 2: Standardized Solution Model.
4 DISCUSSION
The research we conducted looked at a number of
theoretical constructs than can be related to work
engagement, one of them is psychological capital.
Psychological capital is a positive psychological
condition of a person that consists the
characteristics of self-efficacy in all tasks,
optimism, hope, and resilience (Luthans et al.,
2007).
The research result supports Schaufeli & Bakker
(2003) who mentioned that work engagement is
basically influenced by two factors, job demand-
resources model (JD-R) and psychological capital.
JD-R Model consists of a number of aspects, such as
physical condition, social, organization, salary,
career opportunity, supervisor and colleagues’
supports, and also performance feedback.
Meanwhile, for psychological capital, it consists of
self-efficacy, optimism, hope, and resilience.
Sweetman and Luthans (cited in Bakker and
Leiter, 2010) discuss that there is a positive
influence between efficacy, optimism, hope, and
resilience with work engagement. Efficacy is widely
known to come from 4 main sources that can be
proposed according to employee engagement. An
individual who has high efficacy is usually marked
with their persistence to survive, driven by their
belief in their future’s success. Low efficacy appears
to predict burnout, the opposite of engagement.
Therefore, the higher the self-efficacy within an
individual’s self, then it is believed that employee
engagement on an organization is also higher.
According to Bandura (1977), self-efficacy is a
belief that someone can fulfill the required behaviors
to produce a successful result. Furthermore, Saks
and Gruman’s (2011) study mention that self-
ICP-HESOS 2018 - International Conference on Psychology in Health, Educational, Social, and Organizational Settings
326
efficacy is an important factor to bind an individual.
They found that there is a positive relationship
between job fit perceptions, positive emotions and
self-efficacy with employee engagement on new
employees. A newly joining individuals with high
self-efficacy in an organization tend to feel more
secure and psychologically willing to bind
themselves with their new roles (Saks and Gruman,
2011).
On the optimism side, our research is also in line
with Seligman’s (Seligman & Schulman, 1986)
opinion that figures optimism as an attribute
measured based on explanatory style. An optimistic
individual who believe they can achieve their
success will have a more general (I can be successful
from one scope to another), consistent (I can always
succeed), and internal (I created this success)
attitudes. When they face failure, the individual will
have a specific, inconsistent, and external attitude.
Another explanation on optimism was discussed by
Carver and Scheier (2003) that an optimistic
individual expects for good thing to happen to
themselves, they have significant attitude and
cognitive. It is important to notice that psychological
capital sets for a realistic value of optimism, since an
unrealistic optimism may lead to a negative result
(Seligman, 1998). An optimistic individual is
responsible on what has been done and hopes for a
positive result. A good psychological availability
will improve engagement (Kahn, 1990). Overall, the
optimism component of psychological capital is
directly related to service and absorption component
of work engagement.
In its relationship with education institution, the
result of this research shows that optimism is needed
to improve and develop education institutions.
Current human resources in education institution is
also expected to have optimism attitude.
The studies of Christian and Slaughter (2007);
Halbesleben (2010) (cited in Albrecht et al. (2010)
mention some predictors of engagement, such as
social supports, self-efficacy, optimism, and
organization climate. Self-efficacy and optimism
have the roles to improve employee engagement
with the support of conducive organization climate.
A conducive climate is acquired if the employees
perceived their organization to provide supports on
the work performed by the employees. The studies
above show strong influence between self-efficacy
and optimism that support our research.
Wiley et al. (2010, cited in Albrecht, 2010) also
found some facts that work engagement can be well-
formed when the individuals within the organization
are highly motivated and have the opportunity to
develop. An organization has the participation in
providing opportunity for an individual to improve,
and without it there is no way an individual has an
engagement their organization. The study’s result
also has a relationship with our research results. One
of the efforts made by the organization to maximize
the potentials within the organization is by providing
the opportunity for the individuals to develop well,
so the individuals will maximize their all potential
abilities to develop their organization.
Sweetman and Luthans (2010, cited in Baker and
Leiter, 2010) mention that their preliminary research
indicated that between self-efficacy, optimism, hope,
and resilience in their relationships with work
engagement, there was a mediator variable, which is
positive emotion. Specifically, a high positive
emotion will improve the influence of self-efficacy,
hope, optimism, and resilience on work employee
engagement. Sweetman and Luthans (2010) mention
that this positive emotion is related to employees’
behavior within the organization. Halbesleben
(2010), Baker and Leiter (2010) contend that their
hypotheses related to social support, autonomy,
feedback, positive climate of an organization, and
self-efficacy have been proven. From their research
results, there is a relationship between autonomy and
self-efficacy that has a high relationship with work
engagement. Xanthopoulou et al. (2009a, cited in
Baker and Leiter, 2010) argue that personal
resources, which consists of self-efficacy, optimism,
and work resources such as work autonomy,
supervisory coaching, performance feedback, and
employee development opportunity has a high
relationship with work engagement. Both personal
resources and work resources complete each other in
providing positive contributions for the development
of work engagement. In another research,
Xanthopoulou et al. (2009b) investigate that self-
efficacy and optimism are two of a number of
criteria to make meaning out of work engagement.
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