Title: Engr' Mgt 211 Managing Engineering
1Engr. Mgt 211 Managing Engineering Technology
- Chapter 12
- Understanding the Basics of Human Behavior
2Personality Classifying Individual Differences
- An individuals personality is the combination of
the psychological traits that we use to classify
that person for example, quietness, loudness,
aggressiveness, ambition, or persistence
3Predicting Behavior From Personality Traits
Locus of Control
Achievement Orientation
Machiavellianism
Self-Esteem
4Predicting Behavior from Personality Traits
- Locus of Control
- Masters of their own fates are internals
- Outside forces control their lives are called
externals - Internals do well on jobs that require complex
information processing, initiative, and
independent action - Externals are more compliant, more willing to
follow directions so, they do well in
structured, routine jobs in which success depends
on following orders or directions
5Predicting Behavior from Personality Traits
- Achievement Orientation
- People with a high need to achieve continually
strive to improve. Because they want to feel
that their outcomes are due to their own actions,
they prefer tasks of intermediate difficulty
challenges that involve a 50-50 chance of
success. They perform well in tasks that provide
challenge, feedback, and responsibility.
6Predicting Behavior from Personality Traits
- Machiavellianism - High- Machs are pragmatic,
emotionally distant, and believe that ends can
justify means - High-Machs flourish when interacting with others
directly rather than indirectly - High-Machs flourish when situations are
relatively free of rules and regulations and
require impovisation
7Predicting Behavior from Personality Traits
- Self-esteem
- Self- esteem refers to the degree people either
like or dislike themselves - It also refers to how people view their own
self-worth
8Predicting Behavior From Personality Traits
Personality Type
Risk Taking
Self Monitoring
9Predicting Behavior from Personality Traits
- Self-Monitoring
- Self-monitoring people are highly sensitive to
external cues. Individuals high in
self-monitoring can adjust their behavior
according to external, situational factors.
Their mercurial talents allow them to present
public personae that are much different from
their private personalities. However, low
self-monitors cannot disguise themselves so,
what you see is what you get. High
self-monitors are often successful managers who
can play multiple, even contradictory roles.
10Predicting Behavior from Personality Traits
- Risk Taking
- Generally, managers are risk-averse
- High-risk taking managers make decisions more
rapidly and use less information in making their
decisions than low risk-taking managers
11Predicting Behavior from Personality Traits
- Personality Type
- Those with Type A personalities exhibit the
following characteristics - Always moving, walking, and eating rapidly
- Get impatient with the rate at which most things
happen - Strive to think or do two or more things
simultaneously - Cannot cope with leisure time
- Obsessed with measuring their success by what
they acquire
12Predicting Behavior from Personality Traits
- Personality Type
- Those with Type B personalities exhibit the
following characteristics - Never suffer from time urgency or impaience
- Do not display or discuss achievements unless the
situation demands it - Play for fun and relaxation rather than
competition - Can relax without guilt
13Other Classifications
- Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
- Extroverted vs Introverted
- Sensing or intuitive
- Thinking or feeling
- Perceiving or judging
- Big Five Framework
- Extraversion
- Agreeableness
- Conscientiousness
- Emotional stability
- Openness to experience
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15Extraversion
Agreeableness
The Big Five Personality Model
Openness to Experience
Conscientiousness
Emotional Stability
16Other Classifications
- Personality-Job fit model
- Realistic
- Investigative
- Social
- Conventional
- Enterprising
- Artistic
- Implications for managers
17Hollands Theory of Personality-Job Fit
Type
Personality
Occupations
18Occupational Personality Types
Realistic
Investigative
I
R
Conventional
A
C
Artistic
S
E
Social
Enterprising
19Perception and Attributions Interpreting the
World Around US
- People act on their perceptions, not on reality
- Factors Influencing Perception
- Attitudes
- Personality
- Motives
- Interests
- Past Experiences
- Expectations
20Perception and Attributions Interpreting the
World Around US
- Additional Factors Influencing Perception
- Characteristic of the target and its relationship
to its background - Contextual elements such as time, location,
light, or heat
21Perception and Attributions Interpreting the
World Around US
- Attribution Theory
- Attribution theory asserts that when we observe
behavior, we classify it as either internally or
externally motivated. We believe that internally
caused behaviors are under an individuals
control externally caused behaviors are
motivated by outside forces - How we determine the source of behavior is
determined by three factors distinctiveness,
consensus, and consistency
22Interpretation
Attribution of Cause
Observation
High
External
Distinctiveness
Attribution Theory and Individual Behavior
Low
Internal
High
External
Consensus
Low
Internal
External
Consistency
Internal
23Perception and Attributions Interpreting the
World Around US
- Attribution Theory
- Distinctiveness refers to whether an individual
displays different behavior in different
situations - If everyone is faced with a similar situation
responds in the same way, we can say the behavior
shows consensus - Consistency refers to a persons actions
24Perception and Attributions Interpreting the
World Around US
- Perceptual shortcuts or errors we make in judging
others - We cannot assimilate everything , what we
perceive is selectively chosen depending on our
interests, backgrounds, experiences, and
attitudes. In assumed similarity, or the
like-me effect, the observers perceptions of
others is influenced more by the observers own
characteristics than by those of the person
observed. When we judge someone based on our
perception of a group to which he or she belongs,
we are stereotyping.
25Perception and Attributions Interpreting the
World Around US
- Perceptual shortcuts or errors we make in judging
others - When we base our impression of an individual on a
single characteristic, such as intelligence or
appearance, we are influenced by the halo effect.
26Perception and Attributions Interpreting the
World Around US
- Implications for Managers
- Because employees react to perceptions, not to
reality, whether a managers appraisal of a
worker is actually objective is less relevant
than what the worker perceives it to be.
Therefore, managers must pay attention to how
employees perceive their jobs and the
management-employee relationship
27Expectations
- What you see is what you get
- The concept of the self-fulfilling prophecy
asserts that an expectation about how someone
will act causes that person to fulfill that
expectation - First, misperceptions of a situation can evoke
actions that make the original misperception come
true - Second, managers who set realistic high standards
for employees will start a process that enables
them to meet or exceed those standards
28Cognitive
Attitudes Influence Behavior
Affective
Behavioral
29Attitudes Feelings Influence Behavior
- The cognitive component of an attitude includes
the beliefs, opinions, knowledge, or information
held by a person - The affective component of an attitude includes
emotions or feelings - The behavioral component of an attitude reflects
the intention to behave a certain way toward
someone or something
30Attitudes Feelings Influence Behavior
- Popular Work Related Attitudes
- Managers are interested in the following three
job-related attitudes - Job Satisfaction this term refers to an
individuals attitude toward his or her job - Job Involvement This concept measure the degree
to which a person identifies with and derives
self-worth from a job - Organizational Commitment this concept measures
how much an employee identifies with and wishes
to maintain membership with an organization
31Attitudes Feelings Influence Behavior
- Coping with Cognitive Dissonance
- Cognitive Dissonance refers to any
incompatibility that individuals perceive between
their attitudes or between their behavior and
attitudes. The theory asserts that inconsistency
is uncomfortable, so individuals will try to
minimize the dissonance
32Attitudes Feelings Influence Behavior
- Is a Happy Worker a Productive Worker?
- Studies from as far back as the 1930s concluded
that happy workers are productive workers - Implications for Managers
- The attitude of employees can warn management of
potential problems because they influence
behavior. - Managers should remember that workers will try
to reduce cognitive dissonance.
33Is A Happy WorkerA Productive Worker?
Organization- Wide and Individual Data
Satisfaction- Productivity Relationship
34Common Misconceptions
What Are Emotions?
Key Terms
Emotions in the Workplace
35Six Universal Emotions
Happiness
Fear
Anger
Sadness
Disgust
Surprise
36Learning How People Adapt
- Ways people learn
- Operant conditioning this concept argues that
behavior is a function of its consequences.
Operant behavior is learned, in contrast to
reflexive behavior. - Positive reinforcement strengthens behavior and
increases the likelihood that it will be repeated.
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38Social Learning
Attentional Processes Retention Processes Motor
Reproduction Processes Reinforcement Processes
39Learning How People Adapt
- Ways people learn
- Social Learning theory asserts that we can
learn through both observation and experience - Attentional processes people learn from a model
only when they perceive its critical features - Retention processes the influence of a model
depends on how well the individual remembers the
model when it is no longer present - Motor reproduction processes after a person has
seen a new behavior by observing the model,
seeing must be replaced by doing - Reinforcement processes individuals will be
motivated to exhibit the modeled behavior if
positive incentives or rewards are provided
40Managing Learning through Shaping
- When managers attempt to mold individuals by
guiding their learning in graduated steps, they
are shaping behavior. - Managers shape behavior by systematically
reinforcing each successive step that moves an
employee closer to the desired response.
41Shaping Behavior
Positive Reinforcement Negative
Reinforcement Punishment Extinction
42Methods of Shaping Behavior
- Some type of reinforcement is necessary to
produce a change in behavior - Positive reinforcement
- Negative reinforcement
- Punishment
- Extinction (removing reinforcement)
- Some types of rewards are more effective for
organizational use than others - The timing of reinforcement determines the speed
and performance of learning
43Learning Styles
- Learning modes
- Concrete experience
- Reflective observation
- Abstract conceptualization
- Active experimentation
44Learning Styles
Concrete
ACCOMMODATOR
DIVERGER
Passive
Active
ASSIMILATOR
CONVERGER
Abstract
45Learning Styles
- Learning Types
- Accommodator (concrete and active) relies on
intuition or trial and error - Diverger (concrete and passive) has an open
mind and tackles problems from many perspectives - Converger ( abstract and Active) is a thinker
and doer - Assimilator (abstract and passive) likes to
observe nd think about abstract concepts
46Cultural Differences in Human Behavior
- Contrasting Cultures
- United States Americans score high on
individualism - Japan Japanese workers have a high collectivism
score and a moderate power distance score - Australia Workers in Australia score high on
individualism and quality of life
47Learning Styles
- Implications for Managers
- While a number of principles can be applied to
people in general, managers must also acknowledge
individual differences