Comm. 342 Exam I
Country Club
management with high concern for people and low concern for results
team
management with high concern fro people and results
authority-compliance
management with low concern for people and high concern for results
impoverished
management with low concern for people and results
rational-legal authority
obedience to the norms rather than to the person
Activity coordination
ongoing interaction that is necessary to get work done
general beliefs of critical approaches
societal structures and processes lead to imbalance of power, imbalances of power lead to alienation and oppression, critical theorists should uncover these imbalances
Illumination Studies
split employees into 2 groups and adjusted the lights
Relay Assembly Test Room Studies
split employees into 2 groups and adjusted things such as the heat
Hawthorne Studies
springboard for the human relations movement
Duality of Structure
structure creates actions and actions create structure
rules and resources
structures
Bank Wiring Room Studies
studied all men; showed that social norms were more important than written rooms
hegemony
subordinate group accepts domination as the norm
it is a prescriptive theory, a picture of how an organization should be run and not necessarily how it does run
summary of Fayol's theory of classical management
hierarchically ordering, interdependence, permeability
system components
interdependence
system components depend on each other for effective functioning
holism, equifinality, negative entropy, requisite variety
system properties
organizing
the arrangement of human resources and the evaluation of those employees
Theory X
the assumption that employees dislike work, are lazy, dislike responsibility, and must be coerced to perform
Theory Y
the assumption that employees like work, are creative, seek responsibility, and exercise self-direction
coordination
the separate activities in an organization much be harmonized into a single whole
Social Constructionism
theory that suggests reality is not an objective thing but is, instead, an intersubjective construction created through communication
equifinality
there are multiple paths to any system outcome
command
through which managers set tasks for employees in order to meet organizational goals
rational-legal
type of authoring in bureaucracy
rooted in the Great Depression, surplus of workers led to widespread abuse, labor unions grew to get fair wages and better working conditions, World War II
Background of Human Relations
team management
Blake and Mouton say that the best type of management is...
Country Club, team, impoverished, authority-compliance
Blake and Mouton's four types of management
were influenced by emotions
Elton Mayo also believed that decisions...
more important than self-interest
Elton Mayo believed that group norms were...
Society compromises groups, not isolated individuals
Elton Mayo's belief
Mary Parker Follett, Elton Mayo, Chester Barnard
Founders of Human Relations
Elton Mayo
Harvard professor; critiqued and extended scientific management; stressed importance of interpersonal relationships
empowered employees
Mary Parker Follett believed information sharing...
co-active power than coercive power
Mary Parker Follett believed that it was more important to have...
management wouldn't be free to bust the piece rate and the social pressure of systematic soldiering would be diluted
criticism of scientific management
impossible to eliminate outside influences, non-routine tasks are not adequately addressed, varying levels of rationality
criticisms of bureaucracy
employee well-being is more important than profitability, overly simplistic connection between happiness and effectiveness, no empirical support for effects on productivity, misuse of principles
critiques of human relations approach
culture is complicated, culture is emergent, culture is not unitary, culture is ambiguous
descriptive approaches to culture
long-term perspective
employment viewed as career tenure protection
Chester Barnard
established idea of organizational identity
Chester Barnard
executive at Bell telephone; author; influenced by Mary Parker Follett
1) there is one best way to do every job 2) proper selection of workers 3) training workers 4) inherent difference between management and workers
4 tenets of Taylor's scientific management
planning, organizing, command, coordination, control
5 elements of Fayol's theory of classical management
bias for action, close relations to customer, productivity through people
3 of Peters and Waterman's 8 themes
employment security, selective hiring, extensive training
3 of Pfeffer's 7 practices of successful organizations
Illumination Studies, Relay Assembly Test Room Studies, Interview Program, Bank Wiring Room Studies
4 parts of the Hawthorne Studies
interpersonal rather than economic purpose
Chester Barnard believed that management should have an...
common purpose is the key to cooperation
Chester Barnard believed that...
values, heros, rites and rituals, cultural network
Deal and Kennedy's 4 components of a strong culture
Mary Parker Follett
Democratic pragmatist, social worker, believed cooperation of workers under visionary leadership led to productivity
employee dissatisfaction, high turnover, reduced efficiency
concerns addressed by the Hawthorne Studies
1) membership negotiation 2) self-structuring 3) activity coordination 4) institutional positioning
The Four Flows
Douglas McGregor
Theory X and Y theorist
management, military, and academic alliance
Triple Alliance
fixed division of labor, hierarchy of offices, general rules for performance, rigid separation of personal life and work life, fair treatment, long-term perspective
Weber's 6 characteristics of bureaucracy
hierarchically ordering
a system consists of smaller subsystems and is embedded within larger supersystems
negative entropy
a system has the ability to avoid deterioration and thrive due to system openness
holism
a system is more than the sum of its parts
permeability
a system is open to its environment, and system components are open to each other
ideology
a system of ideas that are the basis of theories; our taken-for-granted assumptions about how things are or should be
requisite value
a system should maintain the internal complexity necessary to cope with external complexity
Hawthorne effect
being observed increased productivity
values
beliefs and visions for the organization
rites and rituals
ceremonies through which an organization celebrates its values
written
communication channel of classical approach
face-to-face
communication channel of human relations
all channels
communication channel of human resources
task and social
communication content of human relations
task, social, and innovative
communication content of human resources
task
communication content of the classical approach
vertical and horizontal
communication direction of human relations
all directions, team based
communication direction of human resources
vertical (top down)
communication direction of the classical approach
group member, isolate, bridge, liaison
communication network roles
formal
communication style of classical approach
informal
communication style of human relations
both, but especially informal
communication style of human resources
cultural network
communication system through which the values are shared
control
comparison between goals and activities to ensure that the organization is functioning in the manner planned
Elton Mayo, Roethlisberger, and Dickson
conducted the Hawthorne Studies
looks at social and interpersonal needs of adults, restoration of the whole human being in organizations, quality interpersonal relationships in organizations
goals of human relations approach
fair treatment
hiring based on technical qualifications; equal treatment of all employees
Structuration
idea that suggests the social world is generated through the agency of active participants
heros
individuals who exemplify the organization's values
Hawthorne studies conclusion
informal group norms are more important than formal rules
learnt, both input and output, partly unconscious, historically based
key characteristics of of org. culture according to Williams, Dobson, and Walters
power, ideology, hegemony, emancipation, resistance
key concepts of critical approaches
classical changes are still important in effectiveness, ignores pragmatics/politics of establishing necessary voice for employees
limitations of human resources
planning
looking to the future to determine the best way to attain organizational goals
control of organizational discourse
organizational reality is socially constructed through communicative interaction
Membership negotiation
organizations are communicatively constituted through people who bring the organization into existence and enter and exit over time
Institutional positioning
organizations create relationships with other entities in the environment and establish ways that info and resources can move among relevant organizations
agency
possibility that people can act otherwise in a situation
naive in assuming that there is a single cultural formula for achieving success, objectifies culture , imposition of strong culture, definition of strength
prescriptive approach weaknesses
needs of healthy adults are not met by hierarchy or task specialization, workers feel emotions
principles of human relations
values upward communication, employee voice/worldview/perceptions, organizational climate, participation and dialogue, role of employees in organization effectiveness
principles of human resources approach
Self-structuring
process that serves to design the organization, provide guidance about resource allocation, institute policies, and create rules about how work is accomplished
Communicative Constitution of Organization
processes through which interactions create, re-create, and change organizations