A measurement model of talent management practices among university staff in central region of Uganda
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Date
2016Author
Miiro, Farooq
Othman, Azam
Nordinc, Mohamad Sahari
Ibrahim, Mohd Burhan
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The empirical study objective was twofold; first to survey the degree to which university staff
perceive on the use of talent management instituted a meaningful practice at universities of central
region in Uganda; secondly it focused on testing the suitability of the dimension in terms of reliability,
convergent validity, discriminant validity; and measurement equivalence for both working
experience, and gender of university staff. The sample covered 808 university staff from six universities
in the Central Region of Uganda in the year 2016. Data collection was done using a self-reported
24-item questionnaire so as to determine how the university staff perceive the construct of talent
management practices. The Survey tool was distributed by the researcher and researcher assistants to
volunteers in the six universities that participated in this study. The outcomes of the study reinforced,
illuminated and gave a deeper insight into the results of previous studies on the same subject which
has been infused in the university business and strategy. The study furthermore found evidence of
validity and reliability for a multidimensional construct of talent management practices. Also, the
measurement for working experience proved variant whereas gender was invariant. The findings of
the study will be help stakeholders to contrive informed suggestions towards decision making for
developing and retaining university staff to towards university effective performance, and is a source
of information and knowledge to future research in the same area.
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