Title: Groups, Networks, and Organizations
1Groups, Networks, and Organizations
- How do these groups affect the individual? How
does the individual affect these groups?
2Social Groups
- Social groups are collections of people who share
a sense of common identity and regularity
interact with each other on the basis of shared
expectations. These social groups shape nearly
every experience in our lives. Among the types
of social groups there are
3- In-groups groups toward which one feels loyalty
and respect we belong - Out-groups groups toward which one feels
antagonism and contempt those people - Primary groups includes family, friends, and
other peer groups to which one belongs - Secondary groups are large and impersonal and
often involve fleeting relationships few
emotional ties, powerful commitments, or an
experience of unity.
4- Reference groups provide a standard by which we
judge ourselves in terms of how we think we
appear to others. - Cooley called this the looking glass self
- Group size affects group dynamics
- Small groups are more intimate and have fewer
numbers of relationships - Large groups are more stable with far more
relationships and complexity - Groups of 12 or more usually have some formal
structure - Smallest group is a dyad
5- Leaders are able to influence other members of
the group to what they want - Transactional leaders involves routine leadership
concerned with getting a job done - Transformation leaders involve changing the very
nature of the group itself - Can you think of examples of each?
6- Research supports the idea that individuals in
the group are highly susceptible to group
pressure - Solomon Asch (1952) Going along with the group
- Participants were shown a standard line and then
three comparison lines. Their task was simply to
say which of the three lines next to the standard
line match it. When confederates gave false
answers first, 75 of participants conformed by
giving the wrong answer.
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8- Experiments led by Solomon Asch asked students to
participate in a "vision test." In reality, all
but one of the participants were confederates of
the experimenter, and the study was really about
how the remaining student would react to the
confederates' behavior. - The participants the real subject and the
- confederates were all seated in a classroom
- where they were told to announce their judgment
- of the length of several lines drawn on a series
of - displays. They were asked which line was longer
- than the other, which were the same length, etc.
- The confederates had been prearranged to all
give - an incorrect answer to the tests.
9- - While most subjects answered correctly, many
showed extreme discomfort, and a high proportion
(32) conformed to the erroneous majority view of
the others in the room when there were at least
three confederates present, even when the
majority said that two lines different in length
by several inches were the same length. When the
confederates were not unanimous in their
judgment, subjects were much more likely to
defect than when the confederates all agreed.
Control subjects with no exposure to a majority
view had no trouble giving the correct answer.
10-
- - One difference between the Asch conformity
experiments and the Milgram experiment as carried
out by Stanley Milgram (also famous in social
psychology) is that the subjects of these studies
attributed their performance to their own
misjudgement and "poor eyesight", while those in
the Milgram experiment blamed the experimenter in
explaining their behavior. Conformity may be much
less salient than authority pressure. -
11- - A number of critiques have been lobbed against
Asch's experiment including a question of the
motivation of students to be accurate. Rather
than testing conformity, Asch's study may have
simply measured a disinterested student's
reluctance to engage in conflict to get the
answer right. Moreover, in Asch's experiments the
subjects were not allowed to interact with
confederates. When the experiment was conducted
in which even one confederate was allowed to give
the correct answer, confirming responses dropped
significantly. This is consistent with Milgram's
later findings of the effect of "role models for
defiance" in his classic Obedience Experiment. - - Asch's experiment only tested behavioral
acquiescence and not attitude change.
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13- Stanley Milgrams experiment on Obedience
- to Authority demonstrated that individuals
- will comply with others even when there is
- the possibility of harm to themselves or
- others
14- The Milgram experiment was a seminal series of
- social psychology experiments conducted by Yale
- University psychologist Stanley Milgram, which
- measured the willingness of study participants
to - obey an authority figure who instructed them to
- perform acts that conflicted with their
personal - conscience. Milgram first described his
research - in 1963 in an article published in the Journal
of - Abnormal and Social Psychology, and later
- discussed his findings in greater depth in his
1974 - book, Obedience to Authority An Experimental
- View.
15-
- - The experiments began in July 1961,
- three months after the start of the trial
- of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in
- Jerusalem. Milgram devised the
- experiments to answer this question
- "Could it be that Eichmann and his
- million accomplices in the Holocaust
- were just following orders? Could we call
- them all accomplices?
16-
- - Milgram summed things up in his 1974 article,
"The Perils of Obedience", writing - The legal and philosophic aspects of obedience
are of enormous importance, but they say very
little about how most people behave in concrete
situations. I set up a simple experiment at Yale
University to test how much pain an ordinary
citizen would inflict on another person simply
because he was ordered to by an experimental
scientist. -
17- - Stark authority was pitted against the
subjects' participants' strongest moral
imperatives against hurting others, and, with the
subjects' participants' ears ringing with the
screams of the victims, authority won more often
than not. The extreme willingness of adults to go
to almost any lengths on the command of an
authority constitutes the chief finding of the
study and the fact most urgently demanding
explanation.
18-
- - Ordinary people, simply doing their jobs,
- and without any particular hostility on
- their part, can become agents in a
- terrible destructive process. Moreover,
- even when the destructive effects of their
- work become patently clear, and they are
- asked to carry out actions incompatible
- with fundamental standards of morality,
- relatively few people have the resources
- needed to resist authority.
19- - Groupthink Janis and Mann (1977) identified
that members of a group ignore ways of thinking
an plans of action that go against the group
consensus. - - Not only does groupthink frequently embarrass
potential dissenters into conforming, but it can
also produce a shift in perception so that
alternative possibilities are ruled out without
being seriously considered. - - Groupthink can lead to quick decisions that may
not be good ones
20 Groupthink is a type of thought exhibited by
group members who try to minimize conflict and
reach consensus without critically testing,
analyzing, and evaluating ideas. Groupthink may
cause groups to make hasty, irrational decisions,
where individual doubts are set aside, for fear
of upsetting the groups balance. The term is
usually used as a derogatory term after the
results of a bad decision.
21 Janis looked at the causes of groupthink. In his
book, Victims of Groupthink, he studied several
presidents foreign policy decisions. He examined
the Bay of Pigs invasion, the Cuban missile
crisis, and the Korean and Vietnam wars. After
examining how these decisions were made, he
concluded that there were three main causes of
groupthink 1. Highly cohesive groups are
much more likely to engage in
groupthink. The closer they are, the less likely
they are to raise questions to break the
cohesion. 2. The group isolates itself from
outside experts. In order to make a well
informed decision, the group needs to invite
qualified experts to help weigh the possible
risks. 3. Strong leadership leads to
groupthink, because the leader is more
likely to promote his/her own solution.
22- Social psychologist Clark McCauley's three
conditions under which groupthink occurs - 1. Directive leadership.
- 2. Homogeneity of members' social
- background and ideology.
- 3. Insulation of the group from outside
- sources of information and analysis.
23Symptoms of groupthink In order to make
groupthink testable, Irving Janis devised eight
symptoms that are indicative of groupthink
(197). 1. A feeling of invulnerability
creates excessive optimism and encourages
risk taking. 2. Discounting warnings that
might challenge assumptions. 3. An
unquestioned belief in the groups morality,
causing members to ignore the
consequences of their actions. 4. Stereotyped
views of enemy leaders. 5. Pressure to conform
against members of the group who
disagree. 6. Shutting down of ideas that
deviate from the apparent group
consensus. 7. An illusion of unanimity with
regards to going along with the group.
8. Mindguards- self-appointed members who shield
the group from dissenting opinions.
24 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster (1986) The
Space Shuttle Challenger disaster is a classic
case of groupthink. The Challenger exploded
shortly after liftoff on January 28, 1986
(Vaughan 33). The launch had been originally
scheduled for January 22, but a series of
problems pushed back the launch date. Scientists
and engineers throughout NASA were eager to get
the mission underway. The day before the launch
an engineer brought up a concern about the
o-rings in the booster rockets. Several
conference calls were held to discuss the problem
and the decision to go ahead with the launch was
agreed upon. The group involved in making the
Challenger decision met several of the symptoms
of groupthink. They ignored warnings that
contradicted the groups goal.
25- - The goal was to get the launch off as soon as
possible, and it ended up being a fatal mistake.
They also suffered from a feeling of
invulnerability, up until that point NASA had an
almost spotless safety record. They also failed
to completely examine the risks of their
decision they played it off as if it was nothing
important. Another factor that had suppressed the
few engineers who were "going against the grain"
and "sounding the alarm" was that all eyes were
on NASA not to delay the launch and that Congress
was seeking to earmark large funding to NASA
given the large amount of publicity on the
Teacher in Space program. These misjudgements led
to the tragic loss of several astronauts, and a
huge black mark of NASAs near perfect safety
record.
26- Networks constitute a broad source of
relationships, direct and indirect, some of which
may be especially important in business and
politics. - For example, the poor, individuals of color, and
women often have less access to the most
influential economic and political networks in
society that white men are more likely to have
access to. - Is the internet a social network?
- Some limitations due to a lack of equal access,
the lack of physical proximity but the internet
helps to forge new relationships, the
relationships can be very stimulating, and
involve many shared interests.
27Organizations
- Organizations are groups with an identifiable
membership that engages in concerted collective
action to achieve a common purpose. - Formal organizations are rationally designed to
achieve its objectives, often by means of
explicit rules, regulations, and procedures - Informal organizations may not have explicit
rules, regulations, and procedures but may be
designed to achieve their own objectives. - All modern organizations are, to some extent,
bureaucratic. Can you think of examples of
modern bureaucracies?
28- Bureaucracies are characterized by
- Having a clearly defined hierarchy of authority
- Written rules about the conduct of officials
- Separation between tasks of the officials within
the organization and life outside of it - Members dont own the material resources with
which they operate - Max Weber theorized about bureaucracies and
believed that they were the most effective in
organizing large numbers of people
29- Bureaucracies are supposed to be more efficient
but seem to be detached and impersonal - Informal networks appear to be as important as
formal networks both within an organization and
between organizations - The physical setting of the organization strongly
influences their social features. - This includes the architecture of the
organization and surveillance of individuals that
interact with the organization - Foucault calls surveillance the supervision of
activities in organizations. These efforts apply
to all members of the organization but especially
those on the lower strata of the organization - Prison design it an interesting example (Jeremy
Benthams Panopticon in 1790)
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31- Theory of Surveillance The PANOPTICON
- The PANOPTICON was proposed as a model prison by
Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832), a Utilitarian
philosopher and theorist of British legal reform.
- The Panopticon ("all-seeing") functioned as a
round-the-clock surveillance machine. Its design
ensured that no prisoner could ever see the
'inspector' who conducted surveillance from the
privileged central location within the radial
configuration. The prisoner could never know when
he was being surveilled -- mental uncertainty
that in itself would prove to be a crucial
instrument of discipline. - French philosopher Michel Foucault described the
implications of 'Panopticism' in his 1975 work
Discipline Punish The Birth of the Prison --
32Theories of Organizations
- Max Weber identified the tension between the
organizing forces of centralizing power in the
bureaucracy and the expanding pressures in
society of democracy. - Can you think of examples?
33Gender and Organizations
- It is clear that modern society has divisions
within it for men and for women - Often, women occupy occupations that support the
careers of men - More women have advanced into the professions
occupied by men but have used the same management
styles that men have to make their advances - Can you think of how men and women have been
treated differently in organizations? - Are there alternatives to bureaucracy?
34Alternatives
- Efforts to increase the flexibility of
organizations - Adopting Japanese styles of management to involve
workers lower down in the organization - Bottom-up decision making
- Less specialization
- Job security
- Group Orientation
- Merging of work and private lives
- Improvements in pay and responsibility that are
based on seniority. - Group rather than individual performance
appraisal. - Modern use of technology can dramatically change
the way that organizations work. The limitation
of time and space are challenged.
35Global Organization
- The United Nations is an example of a global
organization that involve governmental groups. - There are concerns about the rate of
globalization and the difficulties in organizing
both governmental and non-governmental
organizations. - What do you think about the McDonaldization of
society and the world?