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Featured researches published by Alexander Bakker.


Current Directions in Psychological Science | 2011

An Evidence-Based Model of Work Engagement

Alexander Bakker

Employees who are engaged in their work are fully connected with their work roles. They are bursting with energy, dedicated to their work, and immersed in their work activities. This article presents an overview of the concept of work engagement. I discuss the antecedents and consequences of engagement. The review shows that job and personal resources are the main predictors of engagement. These resources gain their salience in the context of high job demands. Engaged workers are more open to new information, more productive, and more willing to go the extra mile. Moreover, engaged workers proactively change their work environment in order to stay engaged. The findings of previous studies are integrated in an overall model that can be used to develop work engagement and advance job performance in today’s workplace.


Anxiety Stress and Coping | 2011

Crossover of job demands and emotional exhaustion within teams: A longitudinal multilevel study

Mina Westman; Alexander Bakker; Ilan Roziner; Sabine Sonnentag

This study investigated the crossover of job demands and emotional exhaustion among team members and the moderating effect of cohesiveness and social support on this process. Participants were 310 employees of an employment agency in the Netherlands, working in one of 100 teams. Multilevel analysis using a longitudinal design did not reveal a main effect of crossover. However, consistent with the studys hypotheses, the results showed a moderating effect of team cohesiveness and social support. We detected crossover of job demands and emotional exhaustion across time from the group to individual team members only in teams characterized by high levels of cohesiveness and social support. Teams characterized by low levels of cohesiveness and social support showed no crossover of job demands and exhaustion. The findings demonstrate that team-level moderators play an important role in crossover processes. Moreover, social support and cohesiveness may not always be positive.


The Journal of Positive Psychology | 2011

Emotional labor among trainee police officers: The interpersonal role of positive emotions

Benjamin R. van Gelderen; E.A. Konijn; Alexander Bakker

The aim of this study is to get an insight of the interpersonal process of emotional labor, and the role of positive emotions in the interaction between the sender and receiver, while taking both the perspective of the sender and the receiver into account. We tested the influence of the perceived display of positive emotions of Dutch trainee police officers (N = 80) during an interaction with offenders on perceived authenticity and perceived performance success, incorporating the senders’ emotion regulation technique (i.e., deep acting and surface acting). Consistent with hypotheses, results of structural equation modeling analyses showed that perceived authenticity mediates the relationship between the perceived display of positive emotions and perceived performance success, while the specific senders’ emotion regulation technique was not related to perceived performance success. Furthermore, results showed that perceived performance success mediated the relationship between the perceived display of positive emotions and senders’ felt positive emotions after the interaction, controlling for senders’ positive affect.


Anxiety Stress and Coping | 2011

Working parents of children with behavioral problems: a study on the family-work interface.

Kimberley Breevaart; Alexander Bakker

Abstract This study examines the process by which child behavioral problems are related to parents’ well-being. We developed a family–work spillover model that was tested among 225 working parents. It was hypothesized that family–self conflict (FSC) mediates the relationship between child behavioral problems and parental strain, and that family–work conflict (FWC) mediates the relationship between parental strain and work engagement. Further, it was hypothesized that social support moderates the relationship between child behavioral problems and FSC. The results of (moderated) structural equation modeling supported the mediating role of FSC and FWC and the moderating role of social support. These findings suggest that the negative effects of raising a child with behavioral problems on parental well-being can be buffered by social support.


Journal of Vocational Behavior | 2012

Development and validation of the job crafting scale

Maria Tims; Alexander Bakker; Daantje Derks


Solidarity at Work Occasional Paper Series | 2004

How social support buffers workplace violence: A multi-level study among the military police

Ij. Hetty van Emmerik; Martin Euwema; Alexander Bakker; J. De Jonge


Handboek psychologie van arbeid en gezondheid | 2013

Assessment op organisatieniveau

M.J.P.M. van Veldhoven; J. de Jonge; Peter P. M. Janssen; Wilmar B. Schaufeli; Alexander Bakker


Gedrag en Organisatie | 2013

De JD-R benadering van job crafting

Maria Tims; Alexander Bakker; Daantje Derks


Scherp in werk: 5 routes naar optimale inzetbaarheid | 2012

Werknemers in actie: Job crafting op basis van een online feedback instrument

Maria Tims; Alexander Bakker; Daantje Derks; J. de Jonge; Maria C. W. Peeters; S. Sjollema; H. de Zeeuw


Archive | 2004

What happens after the assessment center? Employees reactions to unfavorable performance feedback

Ij. Hetty van Emmerik; Alexander Bakker; Martin Euwema

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Daantje Derks

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Maria Tims

VU University Amsterdam

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Wilmar B. Schaufeli

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Martin Euwema

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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E.A. Konijn

VU University Amsterdam

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Kimberley Breevaart

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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