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Article
The Older-Worker-Younger-Supervisor Dyad: A Test of the Reverse Pygmalion Effect
Faculty Articles
  • Mary Hair Collins, Strayer University - East Orlando Campus
  • Joseph F. Hair, Jr., Kennesaw State University
  • Tonette S. Rocco, Florida International University
Department
Marketing and Professional Sales
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-1-2009
Abstract

An emerging phenomenon, the older worker reporting to a much younger supervisor, is reversing the tradition that managers are older and more experienced than subordinates. These age-related demographic changes are bringing about a role reversal in the workplace that violates established age norms, creating status incongruence in the supervisor-subordinate dyad. This age-reversed dyad can be better understood by examining generational differences and the effects of older workers' expectations on their younger supervisors' leadership behavior, referred to as Reverse Pygmalion. Research findings highlight demographic differences and similarities in the supervisor-subordinate dyad, called Relational Demography. Major findings are that older workers expect less from their younger supervisors than do younger workers, and in turn older workers rate their younger supervisors' leadership behavior lower than younger workers rate their younger supervisors.

Citation Information
Collins, Mary Hair, Jr Hair Joseph F., and Tonette S. Rocco. "The Older-Worker-Younger-Supervisor Dyad: A Test of the Reverse Pygmalion Effect." Human Resource Development Quarterly 20.1 (2009): 21-41.