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Hall and Donnell reported findings of five separate studies involving over 12,000 managers that explored the relationship between managerial achievement and attitudes toward subordinates. Overall, they found that managers who strongly subscribed to Theory X beliefs were highly likely to believe that workers were naturally motivated to work. were unlikely to rely on coercive, external control methods to motivate workers. were unlikely to have a pessimistic view of others. were highly likely to be in their lower-achieving group.

User Caspert
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Answer:

were highly likely to be in their lower-achieving group.

Step-by-step explanation:

Theory X was a theory created by the American psychologist Douglas McGregor in the late 1950s. This theory assumes that individuals do not like to work unless they are forced to do so. It is an excessively mechanistic and pragmatic theory. Hall and Donnell's study related this theory to the interpretation of some managers in relation to their employees. According to this study, managers who strongly subscribed to Theory X beliefs were very likely to believe that workers were highly likely to be in their underperforming group.

User QuirijnGB
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