Raemdonck, Isabel
[UCL]
Beausaert, Simon
[UCL]
Frochlich, Dominique
[Maastricht university]
Kochoian, Nané
[UCL]
Meurant, Caroline
[UCL]
In today's time of demographic change and rapid innovation, age and employability as well as the role of learning and development are high on the agenda of policy makers and human resource managers. Empirical studies, however, do not provide consistent evidence for the relation between age and employability and between age and work-related formal and informal learning. While many studies find negative relationships, some other studies present positive or insignificant effects. The inconsistent results may hint at conceptual weaknesses of chronological age as a measure, which are often ignored. One such weakness is the difficulty to disentangle effects of age from effects of cohort and period. Also, since people get more heterogeneous the older they become, the less able is it as predictor. Therefore, we state that chronological age itself may not be the most important factor in predicting work-related learning and employability. Alternative significant predictors might be work centrality, learning self-efficacy and future time perspective. In addition, there are age-related individual and organizational obstacles for work-related learning and employability. Two of the most prominent individual obstacles are a decline in motivation to learn and less capability to learn. Organizational barriers are also erected by negative stereotypes about aging workers and by a lack of supporting learning climate for older workers. Therefore, research on other individual and organizational factors might provide more satisfying answers and contribute to new insights for the management of an increasingly older workforce.
Bibliographic reference |
Raemdonck, Isabel ; Beausaert, Simon ; Frochlich, Dominique ; Kochoian, Nané ; Meurant, Caroline. Aging workers’ learning and employability. In: Bal, P. Matthijs, Kooij, Dorien T.A.M., Rousseau, Denise M., Aging workers and the employee-employer relationship, Springer Netherlands 2015, p.157-176 |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/146099 |