Multiskilling in Practice: Lessons from a Minerals Processing Firm
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Industrial Relations
- Vol. 34 (2) , 268-283
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002218569203400205
Abstract
Increasingly, multiskilling programmes are a key element in workplace reform. In this paper, the findings of a longitudinal case study of multiskilling involving process workers are presented. The study found that the multiskilling programme and associated changes to work organization only marginally altered skill requirements for jobs, although there was evidence of increased worker control over certain aspects of the work role. There was no evidence to suggest that these developments reflected a fundamental shift in the nature of management-employee relations. Conclusions are drawn as to the extent to which such innovations signal a departure from traditional Taylorist and Fordist orientations towards skills formation and work organization.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- How does operator control enhance performance of advanced manufacturing technology?Ergonomics, 1991
- ATTITUDINAL AND BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS OF AUTONOMOUS GROUP WORKING: A LONGITUDINAL FIELD STUDY.The Academy of Management Journal, 1991
- Flexible Work Organisation: Inferences from Britain and AustraliaAsia Pacific Journal of Human Resources, 1990
- Assessing the Flexible FirmPersonnel Review, 1990
- Advanced manufacturing technology, work design, and performance: A change study.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1990
- Multi‐skilling: A Discussion of Proposed Benefits of New Approaches to Labour Flexibility within EnterprisesPersonnel Review, 1989
- Skill Formation and the EnterpriseLabour and Industry, 1987
- OUTCOME OF AUTONOMOUS WORKGROUPS: A LONG-TERM FIELD EXPERIMENT.The Academy of Management Journal, 1986
- New work attitude measures of trust, organizational commitment and personal need non‐fulfilmentJournal of Occupational Psychology, 1980
- Scales for the measurement of some work attitudes and aspects of psychological well‐beingJournal of Occupational Psychology, 1979