What is the relationship between a person's specific occupation and their need to derive meaning from their work?
a. Specific occupation has no effect on one's need to derive meaning from their work
b. People in white-collar occupations tend to work just for the pay, while people in blue-collar occupations work to establish a sense of meaning.
c. People in blue-collar occupations tend to work just for the pay, while people in white-collar occupations work to establish a sense of meaning.
d. Most people, including white-collar and blue-collar works, report that they only work for the compensation and the necessities they can by with their pay, and that deriving meaning from their work is not very important to them.
a
You might also like to view...
What is one objection to the Social Readjustment Rating Scale as a way of measuring stress?
a. It considers only unpleasant events and not desirable ones. b. It assumes that many minor events can equal one major event. c. It lists only lifelong stressors and ignores changes in life d. It is too complicated for most people to understand.
Current research suggests that genetic factors ____
a. cause nearly all cases of Alzheimer's b. have no appreciable impact on Alzheimer's risk c. are associated with early-onset Alzheimer's d. function as protective factors not risk factors
Recently, Josephine has been able to understand that when you cut a piece of pie in half you still have the same amount of pie, something she was not able to understand a short time ago. According to Piaget's theory, Josephine
a. must be at least three years of age. b. must have been rewarded by her mother for this understanding. c. has advanced to a different stage of cognitive development. d. will understand this only for pieces of pie but not for any other stimuli.
Parents of children with ASD are especially vulnerable to so-called cures that have little research support because of
A. the unpleasantness of behavioral treatments for the disorder. B. the expense of medication to treat the disorder. C. the severity and lifelong nature of the disorder. D. the lack of awareness about which symptoms are plausibly treatable.