PSYC&100 General Psychology: Chapter 13
Transformational leaders are not ________.
Revolutionary
What is the APA?
A professional association in the United States for clinical and research psychologists
Industrial-organizational psychologists work in four main contexts: academia, government, consulting, and ________.
Business
Design teams for car manufacturers create new vehicle models. What type of team does this exemplify?
Creative
Managers at S-Mart routinely expect their employees to volunteer hours at the local veteran's center. The organization supports this practice since it shows commitment, empathy, and compassion, all things that S-Mart endorses as part of its company mission. This represents the ________ aspect of organizational culture.
Espoused values
Which form of mentor-protégé relationship is the rarest?
Female mentor-male protégé
What does research suggest about gender diversity and team productivity?
Gender-balanced teams performed better, as measured by sales and profits, than predominantly male teams
What was the main idea behind Frederick Taylor's work on the scientific approach to management?
If one could redesign the workplace there would be an increase in both company output and worker wages
Which concept describes traits that are fundamental to one's personal identity (e.g., skin color and hair texture) that an employer cannot use to discriminate in hiring?
Immutable characteristic
Why is age a bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ) for airline pilots?
Mandatory retirement ages exist for safety reasons
Which term describes a form of informal training in which an experienced employee guides the work of a new employee?
Mentoring
________ are the symbols, language (jargon, slang, and humor), narratives (stories and legends), and practices (rituals) that represent the underlying cultural assumptions of an organizational culture.
Observable artifacts
Work-family balance
occurs when people juggle the demands of work life with the demands of family life
Melora has a sick child at home. Her employer allows her to ________ for a week, so she can work from home, set her own hours, and complete most of her work while caring for her child.
Telecommute
Hershel is a strict, goal-oriented manager. When his team achieves their daily productivity goals he rewards them with long lunches and bonus pay. When his team falls behind, he extends the work day by an hour and cuts lunch by fifteen minutes. What type of leader is Hershel?
Transactional
Lucia is optimistic about goal achievement, and she encourages her team to think critically and solve problems. She is also considerate of their needs. What type of leader is Lucia?
Transformational
Several influential early psychologists studied issues that today would be categorized as industrial psychology, including James Cattell, Hugo Münsterberg, and Walter Dill Scott, who were all students of ________.
Wilhelm Wundt
What has research found to be the primary difference between male and female leadership style?
Women tend to practice an interpersonal style and men practice a task-oriented style
Carlos is a small business owner. Recently, he became the primary caretaker for his aging mother. He works long hours at his business while also making sure that his mother can keep her medical appointments and has company in the evening. This exemplifies ________.
Work-family balance
Theory X
assumes workers are inherently lazy and unproductive; managers must have control and use punishments
Theory Y
assumes workers are people who seek to work hard and productively; managers and workers can find creative solutions to problems; workers do not need to be controlled and punished
Human factors psychology
branch of psychology that studies how workers interact with the tools of work and how to design those tools to optimize workers' productivity, safety, and health
Industrial psychology
branch of psychology that studies job characteristics, applicant characteristics, and how to match them; also studies employee training and performance appraisal
Organizational psychology
branch of psychology that studies the interactions between people working in organizations and the effects of those interactions on productivity
Transformational leadership style
characteristic of leaders who are charismatic role models, inspirational, intellectually stimulating, and individually considerate and who seek to change the organization
Transactional leadership style
characteristic of leaders who focus on supervision and organizational goals achieved through a system of rewards and punishments; maintenance of the organizational status quo
Telecommuting
employees' ability to set their own hours allowing them to work from home at different parts of the day
Americans with Disabilities Act
employers cannot discriminate against any individual based on a disability
Performance appraisal
evaluation of an employee's success or lack of success at performing the duties of the job
Procedural justice
fairness by which means are used to achieve results in an organization
Industrial and organizational (I-O) psychology
field in psychology that applies scientific principles to the study of work and the workplace
Work team
group of people within an organization or company given a specific task to achieve together
Hawthrone effect
increase in performance of individuals who are noticed, watched, and paid attention to by researchers or supervisors
Checklist
method used to reduce workplace accidents
Scientific management
theory of management that analyzed and synthesized workflows with the main objective of improving economic efficiency, especially labor productivity
Diversity training
training employees about cultural differences with the goal of improving teamwork
Immutable characteristic
traits that employers cannot use to discriminate in hiring, benefits, promotions, or termination; these traits are fundamental to one's personal identity (e.g. skin color and hair texture)
Organizational culture
values, visions, hierarchies, norms and interactions between its employees; how an organization is run, how it operates, and how it makes decisions
Workplace violence
violence or the threat of violence against workers; can occur inside or outside the workplace
Downsizing
process in which an organization tries to achieve greater overall efficiency by reducing the number of employees
Bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ)
requirement of certain occupations for which denying an individual employment would otherwise violate the law, such as requirements concerning religion or sex
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
responsible for enforcing federal laws that make it illegal to discriminate against a job applicant or an employee because of the person's race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), national origin, age (40 or older), disability, or genetic information
Sexual harassment
sexually-based behavior that is knowingly unwanted and has an adverse effect of a person's employment status, interferes with a person's job performance, or creates a hostile or intimidating work environment
________ psychology is specifically concerned with describing job requirements and assessing individuals for their ability to meet those requirements.
Industrial
Which of the following is not a reason that mentoring is particularly important to the career success of women?
It provides a male authority figure for women
Which of the following is a disadvantage of strengths-based management?
Managers neglect improving their weaknesses and overusing their strengths
Job satisfaction
degree of pleasure that employees derive from their job
Job analysis
determining and listing tasks associated with a particular job