Management 3000 Quizzam 4

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Complementary

John Kotter suggests that in management and leadership, one is not better than the other, in fact they are ________ systems of action.

Consideration

Leader behavior that is concerned with group members' needs and desires and that is directed at creating mutual respect or trust

Daniel Goleman

A psychologist who popularized the trait of emotional intelligence

Narcissism

A self-centered perspective, feelings of superiority, and a drive for personal power and glory

Laissez-faire leadership

A form of "leadership" characterized by a general failure to take responsibility for leading

Charisma

A form of interpersonal attraction that inspires acceptance and support

Passive Leadership

A form of leadership behavior characterized by a lack of leadership skills

Diversity Climate

A subcomponent of an organization's overall climate and is defined as the employees' aggregate perceptions about the organization's diversity-related formal structure characteristics and informal values

Transgender

A term for people whose sense of their gender differs from what is expected based on the sex characteristics with which they are born.

Emotional intelligence

Ability to monitor your and others' feelings and to use this information to guide your thinking and actions

Hierarchy of Needs

Abraham Maslow's ______, proposed that people are motivated by five levels of needs: (1) physiological, (2) safety, (3) love, (4) esteem, and (5) self-actualization

Values

Abstract ideals that guide one's thinking and behavior across all situations "What are your consistent beliefs and feelings about all things?"

Behavioral component of an attitude

Also known as intentional component, this refers to how one intends or expects to behave toward a situation

Extrinsic Rewards

An ____ is the payoff a person receives from others for performing a particular task

Intrinsic Reward

An ____ is the satisfaction, such as a feeling of accomplishment, a person receives from performing the particular task itself

Charismatic Leadership

Assumed to be an individual inspirational and motivational characteristic of particular leaders

Implicit Bias

Attitudes or beliefs that affect our understanding, actions, and decisions in an unconscious manner

Operating Conditioning

B.F. Skinner was the father of ________, the process of controlling behavior by manipulating its consequences.

Self-efficacy

Belief in one's personal ability to do a task "I can/can't do this task"

Manage, Lead

Bernard Bass, concluded that "leaders _____ and managers ____, but the two activities are not synonymous.

Psychopathy

Characterized by lack of concern for others, impulsive behavior, and a dearth of remorse when the psychopath's actions harm others

Affective component of an attitude

Consists of feelings or emotions one has about a situation

Cognitive component of an attitude

Consists of the beliefs and knowledge one has about a situation

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs McClelland's Acquired Needs Theory Deci and Ryan's Self-Determination Theory Herzberg's Two-Factor Theory

Content Perspectives include Four Theories:

Acquired Needs Theory

David McClelland proposed the _____, which states that three needs - achievement, affiliation, and power - are major motives determining people's behavior in the workplace

Organizational Behavior (OB)

Dedicated to better understanding and management of people at work

Leadership Behaviors

Employee characteristics and environmental factors - cause some _____ to be more effective than others.

Contingency Leadership Model

Determines if a leader's style is 1) task-oriented or 2) relationship-oriented and if that style is effective for the situation at hand

Machiavellianism

Displays a cynical view of human nature and condones opportunistic and unethical ways of manipulating people, putting results over principles

Self-Determination Theory

Edward Deci and Richard Ryan developed ______, which assumes that people are driven to try to grow and attain fulfillment, with their behavior and well-being influenced by three innate needs: competence, autonomy, and relatedness

Law of Effect

Edward L. Thorndike's, ______ says behaviors with favorable consequences tends to be repeated, while behavior with unfavorable consequences tends to disappear.

Psychological Empowerment

Employees' belief that they have control over their work

Stressors

Environmental characteristics that cause stress

Servant-Leadership

Focuses on providing increased service to others—meeting the goals of both followers and the organization—rather than to oneself.

Transactional Leadership

Focusing on clarifying employees' roles and task requirements and providing rewards and punishments contingent on performance

Halo effect

Form an impression of an individual based on a single trait

Two-Factor Theory

Frederick Herzberg, _________ proposed that work satisfaction and dissatisfaction arise from two different factors - work satisfaction from motivating factors and work dissatisfaction from hygiene factors

Path-Goal Leadership Model

Holds that the effective leader makes available to followers desirable rewards in the workplace and increases their motivation by clarifying the paths, or behavior, that will help them achieve those goals and providing them with support

Conscientiousness

How dependable, responsible, achievement-oriented, and persistent one is

Openness to Experience

How intellectual, imaginative, curious, and broad-minded one is

Extroversion

How outgoing, talkative, sociable, and assertive a person is

Emotional Stability

How relaxed, secure, and unworried one is

Agreeableness

How trusting, good-natured, cooperative, and soft-hearted one is

External dimensions of diversity

Include an element of choice; they consist of the personal characteristics that people acquire, discard, or modify throughout their lives

Locus of Control

Indicates how much people believe they control their fate through their own efforts "I am/am not the captain of my fate"

Initiating-structure leadership

Leader behavior that organizes and defines—that is, "initiates the structure for"—what employees should be doing to maximize output

Attitudes

Learned predispositions toward a given object. "What are your consistent beliefs and feelings about specific things?"

Importance Control Rewards

Leon Festinger, a social psychologist, gave 3 suggestions on how to deal with discomfort:

Need for achievement, affiliation, and power

Managers are encouraged to recognize three needs in themselves and others. What are those 3 needs?

Individual Behavior Group Behavior

Organizational Behavior looks at two areas:

Fundamental Attribution Bias

People attributes another person's behavior to his or her personal characteristics

Self-Serving Bias

People tend to take more personal responsibility for success than for failure

Generalized self-efficacy

Represents "individuals' perception of their ability to perform across a variety of different situations."

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)

Prohibited discrimination against people with disabilities

Organizational Commitment

Reflects the extent to which an employee identifies with an organization and is committed to its goals

Psychological Safety

Reflects the extent to which people feel free to express their ideas and beliefs without fear of negative consequences

Core self-evaluation

Represents a broad personality trait comprising four positive individual traits: (1) self-efficacy, (2) self-esteem, (3) locus of control, and (4) emotional stability

Diversity

Represents all the ways people are unlike and alike—the differences and similarities in age, gender, race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, capabilities, and socioeconomic background

Ethical Leadership

Represents normatively appropriate behavior that focuses on being a moral role model

Empowering Leadership

Represents the extent to which a leader creates perceptions of psychological empowerment in others

Full-Range Leadership

Suggests that leadership behavior varies along a full range of leadership styles, from passive leadership at one extreme, through transactional leadership, to transformational leadership at the other extreme

Assign jobs accordingly Develop employees' self-efficacy and generalized self-efficacy

The 2 implications for managers:

Selective Attention Interpretation & Evaluation Storing in Memory Retrieving from memory to make judgements & decisions

The 4 Steps in the Perpetual Process

Skill variety Task identity Task significance Autonomy, Feedback

The 5 job characteristics are

Extroversion Agreeableness Conscientiousness Emotional stability Openness to experience

The Big Five Personality Dimensions

Stereotyping Implicit Bias The Halo Effect The Recency Effect Casual Attributions

The Five Distortions in Perceptions

Learning Goal Orientation

The ____ sees goals as a way of developing competence through the acquisition of new skills

Task-Oriented

The ______ style works best in either high-control or low-control situations.

Relationship-Oriented

The ______ style works best in situations of moderate control.

Job Characteristics Model

The ______ was developed by J. Richard Hackman and Greg Oldham, which consists of (a) five core job characteristics that affect (b) three critical psychological states of an employee that in turn affect (c) work outcomes—the employee's motivation, performance, and satisfaction

Leadership

The ability to influence employees to voluntarily pursue organizational goals

Casual Attribution

The activity of inferring causes for observed behavior

Learned helplessness

The debilitating lack of faith in one's ability to control one's environment

Emotional Stability

The extent to which people feel secure and unworried and how likely they are to experience negative emotions under pressure "I'm fairly secure/insecure when working under pressure"

Self-Esteem

The extent to which people like or dislike themselves, their overall self-evaluation "I like/dislike myself"

Job Satisfaction

The extent to which you feel positive or negative about various aspects of your work

Inputs, Outputs, and Comparisons

The key elements in equity theory are _____.

Glass ceiling

The metaphor for an invisible barrier preventing women and minorities from being promoted to top executive jobs

Perception

The process of organizing and interpreting ones environment

Cognative dissonance

The psychological discomfort a person experiences between his or her cognitive attitude and incompatible behavior.

Stereotyping

The tendency to attribute to an individual the characteristics one believes are typical of the group to which that individual belongs

Receny Effect

The tendency to remember recent information better than earlier information

Behavior Modification

The use of reinforcement theory to change human behavior is called ______.

Behavior

Their actions and judgement

Organizational Citizenship Behaviors

Those employee behaviors that are not directly part of employees' job descriptions - that exceed their work-role requirements

Internal Dimensions of Diversity

Those human differences that exert a powerful, sustained effect throughout every stage of our lives

Competence, Autonomy, Relatedness

To achieve psychological growth, people need to satisfy three innate needs of _________.

Task-Oriented Leadership Behaviors

To ensure that people, equipment, and other resources are used in an efficient way to accomplish the mission of a group or organization

Transformational Leadership

Transforms employees to pursue organizational goals over self-interests

Counterproductive Work Behaviors

Types of behavior that harm employees and the organization as a whole

Expectancy Theory

Victor Vroom, _______ boils down to deciding how much effort to exert in a specific task situation

Content Process Job Design Reinforcement

What are the four perspectives on motivation?

Underemployed

Working at jobs that require less education than they have

Global-Mind-Set

Your belief in your ability to influence dissimilar others in a global context

Effort, Performance, Outcomes

Your motivation, involves the relationship between your ____, your ______, and the desirability of the _____ you receive for your performance.

Needs

____ are defined as physiological or psychological deficiencies that arouse behavior

Instrumentality

____ is the expectation that successful performance of the task will lead to the outcome desired

Positive Reinforcement

____ is the use of positive consequences to strengthen a particular behavior

Situational Approach (or contingency approach)

_____ approach to leadership, who believe that effective leadership behavior depends on the situation at hand.

Reinforcement Theory

_____ attempts to explain behavior change by suggesting that behavior with positive consequences tends to be repeated, whereas behavior with negative consequences tends not to be repeated

Voice

_____ is defined as "employees' upward expression of challenging but constructive opinions, concerns, or ideas on work-related issues to their managers."

Expectancy

_____ is the belief that a particular level of effort will lead to a particular level of performance

Negative Reinforcement

_____ is the process of strengthening a behavior by withdrawing something negative.

Punishment

_____ is the process of weakening behavior by presenting something negative or withdrawing something positive

Motivation

_____ may be defined as the psychological processes that arouse and direct goal-directed behavior.

Managers

______ conduct planning, organizing, directing, and control

Job Enrichment

______ consists of building into a job such motivating factors as responsibility, achievement, recognition, stimulating work, and advancement

Managers

______ implement a company's vision and strategic plan

Leadership Coaching

______ is "about enhancing a person's abilities and skills to lead and to help the organization meet its operational objectives

Job Design

______ is the division of an organization's work among its employees and the application of motivational theories to jobs to increase satisfaction and performance

Valence

______ is value, the importance a worker assigns to the possible outcome or reward

Goal-Setting Theory

______ suggests that employees can be motivated by goals that are specific and challenging but achievable, and was developed by Edwin Locke and Gary Latham.

Ralph Stogdill

______'s five traits that are typical of a successful leader include: dominance, intelligence, self-confidence, high energy, task-relevant knowledge

Self-fulfilling prophecy

______, also known as the Pygmalion effect, describes the phenomenon in which people's expectations of themselves or others lead them to behave in ways that make those expectations come true.

Stretch Goals

______, which are goals beyond what they actually expect to achieve.

Equity Theory

_______ is a model of motivation that explains how people strive for fairness and justice in social exchanges or give-and-take relationships, that was pioneered by J. Stacey Adams.

Management Leadership

_______ is about coping with complexity and _______ is about coping with change.

Procedural Justice

_______ is defined as the perceived fairness of the process and procedures used to make allocation decisions

Scientific Management

_______ is the process of reducing the number of tasks a worker performs

Distributive Justice

_______ reflects the perceived fairness of how resources and rewards are distributed or allocated

Content Perspective

_______, also known as need-based perspectives, are theories that emphasize the needs that motivate people

Hygiene Factors

_______, are factors associated with job dissatisfaction - such as salary, working conditions, interpersonal relationships, and company policy - all of which affect the job context in which people work

Process Perspectives

________ are concerned with the thought processes by which people decide how to act

Leaders

________ inspire, encourage, and rally others to achieve great goals and create and articulate the managers vision and plan.

Reinforcement

________ is anything that causes a given behavior to be repeated or inhibited

Fitting jobs to people

________ is based on the assumption that people are underutilized at work and that they want more variety, challenges, and responsibility

Extinction

________ is the weakening of behavior by ignoring it or making sure it is not reinforced

Performance Goal Orientation

________, is a way of demonstrating and validating a competence we already have by seeking the approval of others.

Motivating Factors

________, or simply motivators, are factors associated with job satisfaction—such as achievement, recognition, responsibility, and advancement—all of which affect the job content or the rewards of work performance

Interactional Justice

_________ relates to the "quality of the interpersonal treatment people receive when procedures are implemented.

Job Enlargement

__________ consists of increasing the number of tasks in a job to increase variety and motivation

Employee engagement

a "mental state in which a person performing a work activity is full immersed in the activity, feeling full of energy and enthusiasm for the work."

Influence Tactics

conscious efforts to affect and change a specific behavior in others

Personality

consists of the stable psychological traits and behavioral attributes that give a person his or her identity.

Coercive Power

results from managers' authority to punish their subordinates

Referent Power

power deriving from one's personal attraction

Personalized Power

power directed at helping oneself as a way of enhancing their own selfish ends may give the word power a bad name

Socialized Power

power directed at helping others

Expert Power

power resulting from one's specialized information or expertise

Reward power

power that results from managers' authority to reward their subordinates

Legitimate power

power that results from managers' formal positions within the organization

Relationship-oriented leadership

primarily concerned with the leader's interactions with his or her people

Power

the ability to marshal human, informational, and other resources to get something done.

Ethnocentrism

the belief that your native country, culture, language, abilities, or behavior us superior to those of another culture.

Managerial Leadership

the process of influencing others to understand and agree about what needs to be done and the process of facilitating individual and collective efforts to accomplish shared objectives

Authority

the right to perform or command

Behavioral Leadership Approaches

used to determine the key behaviors displayed by effective leaders


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