The overt test help to determine the employees attitude toward theft and counterproductive behavior.
It has been proposed that a person-by-environment interaction can be utilized to explain a variety of counterproductive behaviors.
Less common but potentially more detrimental forms of counterproductive behavior have also been investigated including violence, substance use, and sexual harassment.
This leads to the strange practice of encouraging counterproductive behaviour.
Here are some examples in order to understand what counterproductive behavior is:
These are the examples of counterproductive behavior that people confront in their daily life.
Levy also discusses absence rates, turnover, and counterproductive behaviors.
Workplace counterproductive behaviour: Employee behavior that goes against the goals of an organization.
One problem is that evaluating teachers using test scores could encourage counterproductive behaviors, such as teaching to the test or even cheating.
Absentee rates, substance abuse, lateness and other forms of "counterproductive" behavior are down, too.