McGraw-Hill OnlineMcGraw-Hill Higher EducationLearning Center
Student Center | Instructor Center | Information Center | Home
Career Opportunities
Glossary
Internet Guide
Study Skills Primer
Statistics Primer
Grade Summit
PowerWeb
Learning Objectives
Chapter Outline
Multiple Choice Quiz
Glossary
Flashcards
Internet Exercises
Interactive Reviews
Interactive Activities
Crossword Puzzle
Web Links
FAQs
Around The Globe
For More Information
Feedback
Help Center


Psychology 5/e Book Cover
Psychology, 5/e
Lester M. Sdorow, Arcadia University
Cheryl A. Rickabaugh, University of Redlands

Motivation

Around The Globe

Work Motivation

Extrinsic motivation can snuff out intrinsic motivation, even on a nationwide scale. Silverthorne (1996) set out to study the motivations of employees in the public and private sectors in Taiwan. Research in the United States showed that people working in profit and non-profit jobs had very different personalities. The non-profit employees did not value money as a reward. Instead, they valued their ability to make a difference in their organization, and they had a higher need to achieve than people employed by for-profit entities.

However, Taiwan is not the United States. The public and private sector workers did have slightly different reasons for taking their jobs, but showed no differences when they rated how much they agreed with statements like "The purpose of a job is to earn money" and "People's career choice should be based on what provides a service to society." Silverthorne explains that in Taiwan, public service is honored, which is not always the case in the United States. With higher social status, public employment does not just attract and reward people who like to change their workplace. Instead, public servants have the same rewards and motives as anyone else.