“…Generally, studies tend to show that the higher the value or importance that people attribute to work and the more central it is to their lives, then the more they feel engaged in their role as a worker (Hattrup et al, 2007), the more it is a source of accomplishment, and the more it contributes to their identity and personal development (Arvey, Harpaz, & Liao, 2004;Blustein, 2011;Méda & Vendramin, 2013;Tziner, Ben-David, & Sharoni, 2014). Likewise, numerous studies tend to show that the importance attached to work is a stable dimension in the relationship to work that does not vary greatly throughout a person's lifetime (Ardichvili, 2005;Bal & Kooij, 2010;Harpaz & Fu, 2002;Hirschfeld & Feild, 2000;Kuchinke et al, 2011;Ruiz-Quintanilla, 1991;Samuel & Harpaz, 2004;Saunders & Nedelec, 2014). In the questionnaire, the absolute centrality of work, which is considered to be a stable variable in the relationship to work, was conceptualized using two sub-dimensions, namely: the ideological value of work, defined as the individual's belief in the importance of work in human existence; and the existential value of work, defined as the importance of work in a person's life.…”