Title: Chapter 1: Developing SelfAwareness
1Chapter 1 Developing Self-Awareness
- Who are you,and what is your preferred work
style?
2Objectives
- Increase personal awareness of your
- Sensitive line
- Personal values and moral maturity
- Learning style
- Orientation toward change
- Interpersonal style
3Sensitive Line
- Point at which individuals become defensive or
protective when encountering information about
themselves - Increased self-knowledge occurs when
- Information is verifiable, predictable and
controllable - Self-disclose so others can provide insights into
your behavior
4Core Aspects of Self-Concept
Values
Attitudes (Toward Change)
Learning Style
Interpersonal Needs
5Values
- Fundamental standards of desirability by which we
choose between alternatives, assumptions about
the nature of reality - learned early, continue to develop
- drive choices and behavior
- differ based on culture and environment
6Cultural Values
- Broad, general orientations that characterize
large groups - Identify ways in which nationalities differ from
one another - Cultural values predict individual values
7Trompenaars Value Dimensions
"Flags courtesy of www.theodora.com/flags. Used
with permission"
8Rokeach - Two Types of Personal Values
- Terminal
- Comfortable life
- Exciting life
- World at peace
- World of beauty
- Equality
- Family security
- etc...
- Instrumental
- Ambitious
- Capable
- Cheerful
- Clean
- Courageous
- Forgiving
- etc...
9Most managers...
- value sense of accomplishment, self-respect, a
comfortable life, power, and independence more
than others - highest instrumental value ambition
- highest terminal value accomplishment
- tend to be achievement-oriented
10Kohlberg Value Maturity Model
- Three levels of maturity with six stages of
development - Self-centered level (1) obedience and
punishment, (2) naively egoistic orientations - Conformity level (3) good person, (4) doing
duty orientations - Principled level (5) contractual legalistic,
(6) conscience of principle orientations
11Defining Issues Test Comparison Data
SCORING IN THIS STAGE 6.98 18.08
31.00 28.40 6.37 4.53 4.63
LEVEL 2 3 4 5 6 A M
SOURCE Davidson, M. and Robbins, S. (1978) The
reliability and validity of objective indices of
moral development. Applied Psychological
Measurement, 2391-403.
12Value-Based Decision Making
- Most managers feel pressure to compromise
personal values to achieve company goals - Some tests of ethical behavior
- Would I be comfortable if behavior was on the
front page of the newspaper? - Will my actions produce a good nights sleep?
13Learning Style
- An individuals inclination to perceive,
interpret and respond to information in a certain
way - Two key dimensions
- manner in which you gather information
- way in which you evaluate and act on information
14Learning Styles - Kolb
- Concrete experience learn through personal
involvement - Reflective observation seek meaning through
study - Abstract conceptualization build theories using
logic, ideas and concepts - Active experimentation change situations and
influence others to see what happens
15Sample Scoring for LSI
Concrete Experience
Accommodating
Diverging
Reflective Observation
Active Experimentation
Converging
Assimilating
Abstract Conceptualization
16Tolerance of Ambiguity
- The extent to which individuals are threatened by
or have difficulty coping with ambiguity,
uncertainty, unpredictability, complexity... - Organizational environments are characterized by
more and more information, turbulence and
complexity
17Tolerance of Ambiguity Dimensions
- Novelty coping with new, unfamiliar situations
- Complexity using multiple, distinctive, or
unrelated info
- Insolubility dealing with problems that are
difficult to solve
18Managers with High Tolerance for Ambiguity...
- are more entrepreneurial in their actions
- screen out less information in complex
environment - choose specialties that are less structured
- cope more effectively with organizational change,
downsizing, role stress and conflict
19Locus of Control
- The attitude people develop regarding the extent
to which they are in control of their own destiny - Most successful American managers have internal
locus of control they believe that they control
destiny rather than being controlled by outside
forces (external locus of control)
20High Internal LOC
- less alienated from work
- more satisfied with work
- experience less job strain
- more likely to be leaders
- do better in stressful situations
- use more persuasive power
- less likely to comply with leader directions
21Locus of Control Scale Comparison Data
- SAMPLE SCORE NUMBER MEAN
- Alberta Municipal Administrators 50
6.24 - Business Executives 71 8.29
- Career Military Officers 261
8.29 - Connecticut Psychology Students 303
3.88 - National High School Sample 1000
8.50 - Ohio State Psychology Students 1180
8.29 - Peace Corps Trainees 155 5.94
- Sources Rotter, 1966 Harvey, 1971
Rothberg, 1980 (Higher scores more external.)
(29 possible points.)
22Interpersonal Needs
- Need to work with others to accomplish tasks
- Need to work with others to reduce anxiety
- Need to work with others to define oneself
- Personality determines style of working with
others - FIRO-B measures differences in styles
23FIRO-B Descriptors
24Average FIRO-B Scores and Ranges
25FIRO-B Incompatibilities
- Reciprocal Difference between one persons
expressed behavior and another persons wanted
behavior - Originator Match between expressed scores of
two individuals - Interchange Extent to which two people
emphasize the same interpersonal needs
26Developing Self-Awareness Behavioral Guidelines
- Identify your sensitive line
- Identify your values and those of others
- Seek ways to expand yourself
- Identify important interpersonal
incompatibilities - Engage in self-disclosure
- Keep a journal