MGMT 473 Exam 1 SELU Connie Budden
Some investors in the stock market become overconfident and ignore evidence that their strategies will lose money. This can be attributed to _____.
- Confirmation bias
Organization's social moral obligation towards its stakeholders:
- Corporate social responsibility
Anger, fear, joy, and sadness represent the:
- Different types of emotions
Types of Organizational Justice:
- Distributive - Procedural
Factors of the 4-Drive Theory:
- Drive to Acquire - Drive to Defend - Drive to Learn - Drive to Bond
Non-cognitive ability to identify, understand, and manage emotions of self and others:
- Emotional Intelligence
How well a person handles their emotions:
- Emotional Labor
Customer service representatives (CSRs) often conceal their frustration when serving an irritating customer. This behavior from the CSRs is an example of:
- Emotional labor
The effort, planning, and control needed to express organizationally desired emotions during interpersonal transactions
- Emotional labor
Intense feeling that are directed at specific objects:
- Emotions
A theory explaining how people develop perceptions of fairness in the distribution and exchange of resources:
- Equity Theory
Things that support ethical behavior:
- Ethical code of conduct - Ethics training - Ethics hotline - Ethical leadership - Enforcement - Proficiency
The values that judge actions and outcomes:
- Ethics
Types of diversity in the workforce:
- Ethnic groups - Women - Generations
Types of stress:
- Eustress (positive) - functional stress - Distress (negative) - dysfunctional stress
Who does globalization impact?
- Everyone
A motivation theory based on the idea that work effort is directed toward behaviors that people believe will lead to desired outcomes:
- Expectancy Theory
T/F: A global mindset excludes the capacity to empathize and act effectively across cultures.
- False
T/F: According to learned needs theory, companies should hire leaders with a strong need for personalized power.
- False
T/F: All stress is job related.
- False
T/F: Competencies refer to the complete set of motivations, abilities, role perceptions, and situational factors that contribute to job performance.
- False
T/F: Emotions represent the cluster of beliefs, assessed feelings, and behavioral intentions towards something or someone guided by conscious logical reasoning.
- False
T/F: In order for something to be called an organization, it must have certain assets such as buildings and equipment.
- False
T/F: Maslow's needs hierarchy theory explains how people develop perceptions of fairness in the distribution and exchange of resources.
- False
T/F: Moods are less intense emotional states that are directed toward something or somebody in particular.
- False
T/F: Motivation is an external force on the person that causes him/her to engage in specific behaviors.
- False
The process by which individuals give meaning (reality) to their environment by organizing and interpreting their sensory impressions:
- Perception
Which of the following refers to the process of receiving information about and making sense of the world around us?
- Perception
Relatively stable pattern of behaviors and consistent internal states that explain a person's behavioral tendencies:
- Personality
Levels of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs (lowest to highest):
- Physiological (foods, water, air, shelter) - Safety (security, stability) - Social (interaction with and affection from others) - Esteem (self-esteem, social status) - Self-Actualization (self-fulfillment, realization of one's potential)
Modification methods of Behavior Modification:
- Positive reinforcement - Negative reinforcement - Punishment - Extinction (take that good thing away)
Types of consequences in Operant Learning:
- Positive reinforcement (rewards) - Punishment or ignored
Quickly form an opinion of people based on the first information received about them:
- Primacy Effect
Job satisfaction affects:
- Productivity - Absenteeism - Turnover - Customer satisfaction - Workplace misbehavior
Describe Individual Rights:
- Protecting individual liberties and privacy
What to do if there are perceived inequalities:
- Rationalize ratios - Induce others to change their inputs or outcomes - Change own inputs or outcomes - Choose a different comparison other - Quit
Most recent information dominates perception of others:
- Recency Effect
Ways to reduce stress:
- Selection - Improve communication - Performance planning programs - Job redesigns - Improve physical environment
________ is the process of filtering information received by our senses.
- Selective Attention
Screening out information that is contrary to our values and assumptions to more readily accept confirming information:
- Selective Attention (Confirmation Bias)
Expectations about another person cause that person to act more consistently with those expectations:
- Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
Parts of Emotional Intelligence:
- Self-awareness - Self-management - Social awareness - Relationship management
An individual's self-beliefs and self-evaluations:
- Self-concept
Examples of stakeholders:
- Shareholders - Customers - Suppliers - Governments
The different generations in the workforce:
- Silents - 6% - Baby Boomers - 37% - Gen X - 28% - Gen Y (Millennials) - 26% - Gen Z - 3%
Describe Distributive Justice:
- Perceived fairness of amount relative to a comparison of another amount
Describe Knowledge Sharing:
- Communication
Behavioral consequences of stress:
- Absenteeism - Change in productivity - Change in eating habits - Increased smoking - Increased consumption of alcohol - Rapid speech - Fidgeting - Sleep disorders
Describe goals:
- Accepted, specific, and challenging yet achievable
In expectancy theory, valence refers to the:
- Anticipated satisfaction or dissatisfaction that an individual feels towards an outcome
Overestimating the extent to which others have beliefs and characteristics similar to our own:
- Assumed Similarity
Shortcuts used in judging others:
- Assumed similarity - Stereotyping - Halo effect - Mental modes - Self-fulfilling prophecy - Selective attention (Confirmation bias) - Primacy effect - Recency effect
Long-lasting evaluative statements that can be favorable or unfavorable:
- Attitudes
Describe the Self-Serving Bias:
- Attribute successes to internal factors - Blame failures on external factors
Describe Knowledge Use:
- Awareness - Freedom to apply
Describe Utilitarianism:
- Based on the outcome
Describe the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator:
- Based on the works of Carl Jung - Controversial as a selection tool - Great for: work settings, career counseling, executive coaching, etc. - Developed by Katherine Brigg and her daughter Isabel Myers
Attempting to "mold" individuals:
- Behavior Modification
A state of anxiety that occurs when an individual's beliefs, feelings, attitudes, and behaviors are inconsistent with each other (mixed feelings/emotions):
- Cognitive Dissonance
The uncomfortable tension felt when our behavior and attitudes are inconsistent with each other is called:
- Cognitive dissonance
T/F: OB can be used to fulfill the need to understand and predict the behavior of others in the organization. However, it is not helpful in influencing others to getting things done in organizations.
- False
T/F: The ideal situation in organizations is to have employees whose values are perfectly congruent with the organization's values.
- False
T/F: The most effective reinforcement schedule for learning new tasks is variable ratio schedule.
- False
T/F: The perceptual process begins by attributing behavior to internal or external causes.
- False
Which of the following terms best represents the positive or negative evaluations of the attitude object?
- Feelings
Describe the Attribution Theory:
- Figures out what the causation is - The perceptual process of deciding whether an observed behavior or event is caused largely by internal or external factors
Describe Operant Learning:
- Founded by B. F. Skinner - Behavior is a function of its consequences and is learning through experience
Example of a social identity in terms of groups:
- Fraternity
The capacity to empathize and act effectively across cultures:
- Global mindset
Economic, social, and cultural connectivity (and inter-dependency) with people in other parts of the world:
- Globalization
3 challenges of organizations:
- Globalization - Increased workforce diversity - Emerging employment relationship
The process of motivating employees and clarifying their role perceptions by establishing performance objectives:
- Goal-Setting Theory
General impression of a person, usually based on 1 prominent characteristic, colors the perception of other characteristics of that person:
- Halo Effect
The best managers tend to have relatively _____ Need for Power with relatively _____ Need for Affiliation.
- High - Low
Describe the relationship between job satisfaction and attitude:
- High job satisfaction = good attitude - Low job satisfaction = bad attitude
Describe Knowledge Acquisition:
- Hire/acquire - Individual learning
Physical consequences of stress:
- Hypertension - Changes in metabolism - Increased heart rate - Increased breathing rate
2 factors of the Attribution Theory:
- Internal factors - External factors
Describe the types of Locus of Control:
- Internal: "It's my fault" - External: "It's someone else's fault"
Attitude factors:
- Job satisfaction - Stress
Types of knowledge management:
- Knowledge acquisition - Knowledge sharing - Knowledge use
Describe Social Learning:
- Learn by observations and direct experimentation
Any relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of experience:
- Learning
Self-concept is shaped by:
- Locus of control - Social identity in terms of groups
The values the judge actions and outcomes:
- Managerial ethics
A motivation theory of needs arranged in a hierarchy, whereby people are motivated to fulfill a higher need as a lower one becomes gratified:
- Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
Suggests that needs are impacted by self-concept, social norms, and past experience:
- McClelland's Learned Needs Theory
Knowledge structures that we develop to describe, explain, and predict the world around us:
- Mental Modes
Longer-lasting emotions that aren't towards a specific object:
- Moods
Influences on ethical conduct:
- Moral intensity - Ethical sensitivity - Situational influences
Current issues in motivation:
- Motivating professionals - Motivating contingent (temporary) workers - Motivating lower-skill, lower-wage employees - Money
The factors or needs within a person that affect voluntary behavior:
- Motivation
What are the parts of the MARS Model?
- Motivation - Ability - Role perceptions - Situational factors
3 learned needs/motivators of McClelland's Learned Needs Theory:
- Need for Power - Need for Achievement - Need for Affiliation
Forces of motivation:
- Needs - Direction - Intensity - Persistence
Effects of globalization:
- New organizational structure - Different forms of communication - More diverse workforce - More competition and mergers - Global mindset
The optimal level difficulty of a goal:
- Occurs when the goal is challenging but not impossible
Perspectives of effectiveness:
- Open systems - Organizational learning - High performance work practices - Stakeholders
These Big 5 make up personality:
- Openness - Conscientiousness - Extroversion - Agreeableness - Neuroticism
Theories of Learning:
- Operant Conditioning - Social Learning
The study of what people think, feel, and do in and around organizations:
- Organizational behavior
Describe Distributive Justice:
- Organizational rules are enforced fairly and impartially
Groups of people who work interdependently toward a purpose:
- Organizations
Values in the workplace:
- Stable, long lasting evaluative beliefs about what is important thereby guiding our preferences - Define right or wrong, good vs bad. espoused vs enacted values
Assigning traits to people based in their membership in a social category:
- Stereotyping
The process of assigning traits to people based on their membership in an identifiable social category is called:
- Stereotyping
Physical and psychological tension dealt when confronted with extraordinary demands, constraints, or opportunities:
- Stress
Types of individual behavior:
- Task Performance - Organizational Citizenship - Counterproductive work behaviors - Joining & staying with the organization - Maintaining work attendance
Working from home, usually internet connections to office:
- Telecommunication
Psychological consequences of stress:
- Tension - Anxiety - Boredom - Irritability - Procrastination
In the expectancy theory, an individual's actions depend on:
- The expectation that the individual can perform the act - The expectation that the act will be followed by a given outcome - The valence
Describe Procedural Justice:
- The perceived fairness of the process used to decide the distribution of resources
Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE):
- The tendency to overestimate the influence of internal factors in determining behavior while underestimating situational factors
Describe Enacted Values:
- The values actually used
Describe Espoused Values:
- The values we say we use
In the four-drive theory, the drive ______ is most closely associated with the need for relative status and recognition.
- To acquire
T/F: 3 challenges organizations are facing include globalization, increasing workforce diversity, and emerging employment relationships.
- True
T/F: Attitudes represent a cluster of beliefs, motivation and feelings about an attitude object.
- True
T/F: Beliefs are established perceptions about the attitude object.
- True
T/F: Confirmation bias causes us to screen out information that is contrary to our values and assumptions.
- True
T/F: Emotional Intelligence is something that can be and should be learned.
- True
T/F: Emotions generate a core affect that something is good or bad, helpful or harmful, to be approached or avoided.
- True
T/F: Expectancy theory of motivation states that people naturally direct their effort towards behaviors they believe are most likely to lead to desired outcomes.
- True
T/F: Goal setting potentially improves employee performance by increasing motivation and clarifying role perceptions.
- True
T/F: In terms of cross-cultural values, people in the United States tend to have relatively high individualism, middle to high achievement orientation, and medium to low power distance.
- True
T/F: Motivation is closely related to the concept of employee engagement.
- True
T/F: Motivation works best when individual needs are compatible with organizational goals.
- True
T/F: Organizational behavior encompasses the study of how organizations interact with their external environments.
- True
T/F: Our emotions influence what we recognize or screen out.
- True
T/F: People who believe that their successful completion of a project is due to their skill and hard work are making an internal attribution.
- True
T/F: People with a high need for affiliation tend to be more effective in jobs that require them to mediate conflicts.
- True
T/F: Stereotyping is an extension of social identity theory and a product of our natural process of organizing information through categorical thinking.
- True
T/F: The MARS model identifies the 4 main factors that influence individual behavior: motivation, ability, role perceptions, and situational factors.
- True
T/F: Values are stable, evaluative beliefs about what is important in a variety of situations.
- True
Why study OB?
- Understand, Predict, and Influence organizational events
What are the ethical principles?
- Utilitarianism - Individual rights - Distributive justice
Stable, long-lasting evaluative beliefs about what is important in a variety of situations:
- Values
Operate across space, time, and organizational boundaries:
- Virtual teams
Using information technology to perform one's job away from the traditional physical workplace:
- Virtual work
Types of stressors:
- Work overload - Low task control - Harassment - Incivility