Nailed it: How Work Passion Relates to Safety Behavior Amongst Construction Foremen
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Abstract
The construction industry is one of the most physically dangerous fields in the world. Traditionally, safety research has focused on environmental hazards, organizational
capacity, etc. More recently, psychological factors are recognized as critical in shaping
safety behaviour. Among which, workplace passion is a powerful and entirely unexplored
factor within construction safety research. This study investigated the relationship
between work passion and safety behaviour. The research employed a questionnaire
based on two existing validated scales- the Work Passion Scale (WPS) measuring four
dimensions: Work Enjoyment, Self Motivation, Self Identity, and Sense of Learning, and
the Safety Behaviour Scale (SBS). The respondents were experienced (M = 19.9 years),
foremen (M = 43.2 years) spanning 51 different trades and approximately 50 different
companies. Pearson correlation analysis revealed a positive correlation between overall
Work Passion and Safety Behaviour (r = 0.322, p = .001). However, a dimensional specific
analysis showed that Self Identity had the strongest relationship with safety behaviour (r
= 0.451, p < .001), followed by Sense of Learning (r = 0.339, p < .001). Whereas Work
Enjoyment (r = 0.096, p = .340) and Self Motivation (r = 0.091, p = .364) showed no
significant relationship. These findings suggest that work passion can impact safety
behaviour specifically in identity-based and learning-oriented dimensions. The study
provides practical implications for the construction industry in recommending a shift
from a compliance-oriented safety environment to a commitment oriented one.
Description
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2026
