Title: Human Behavior in Organizations
1Human Behavior in Organizations
MGMT 4534 (Monday Session)Class 01 Course
Introduction and What is Organizational
BehaviorDr. James A. Burrescia
2Welcome to MGMT 4534
- An exploration, as an collaborative class, of the
expanded role of behavior within organizations
and the intricacies of how people interact and
react within an organizational environment.
3The Objectives for MGMT 4534
Saturday November 19, 2005
To develop an understanding of basic behavior
theory and its application to contemporary
organizations. To develop an understanding of
behavior techniques and their use in the world of
management. To develop the conceptual and
analytical framework to become a diagnostician of
organizational systems, structure, and
processes.. To enhance managerial and
professional abilities through application of
concepts, theories, and frames of reference by
active participation in class discussions, cases,
and simulations.
4Class 1 What to expect!
Saturday November 19, 2005
5Introductions
Dr. Jim Burrescia
- BA (Geology) MA (Geography) MS (Systems
Management) - DM (Organizational Leadership)
- Retired Air Force Officer (20 Years)
- Private Industry Management (13 years)
6Syllabus Review
- Course Schedule 11/19/2005 01/14/2006
Course Location/Times Main campus - Saturdays 900 100
- Instructors Name
- Dr. Jim Burrescia Telephone 530-356-6316
(cell) - UHCL E-mail Address burrescia_at_cl.uh.edu
- Alternative E-mail Address burresja_at_sbcglobal.n
et - Availability
- Please leave a message at any time, and your
phone call will be returned as soon as possible,
or contact using listed E-mail addresses.
7Syllabus Review
Attendance and Participation
- Students are requested to attend each class
- Students will not receive participation points or
attendance credit for a missed class. - Each student is expected to participate in all
class activities. - Up to 6 point(s) could be deducted per class
based on the level of participation in each
activity. - Each class will be given break periods.
Students are expected to return from the break on
time. - Students are expected to be punctual. Late
arrival or partial presence will be recorded and
may result in a reduction of class participation
points.
8Syllabus Review
Assignments and Feedback
-
- Assignments and tests are not accepted via
e-mail. - Please Note I will not request or remind
students of missing or late assignments. -
- I will return the student assignments in a timely
manner with specific and objective feedback. - The student may be contacted by the instructor,
either by email or telephone, to resolve any
concern. - The student may contact me to discuss concerns or
schedule a conference. - Incompletes, as a final grade, are not given
in this course except under extenuating
circumstances.
9Syllabus Review
Participation and Course Assignments Grade Values
GRADING Individual Cumulative
Date 1st Exam 25 25
2/22/2006 80 Take-Home 20 In-Class 2nd
Exam 25 50 3/29/2006 32
Take-Home 8 In-Class 3rd Exam
25 75 5/3/2006 All Multiple
Choice Participation 25 100
Throughout GRADES A 93 to
100 A- 90 to 92 A Range 92 to
100 B 87 to 89 B 83 to 86 B
Range 82 to 87 B- 80 to 82 C 77 to 79
C 73 to 76 C Range 72 to
79 C- 70 to 72 D 67 to 69 D 63
to 66 D Range 62 to 69 D- 60 to 62
F Below 60
10Course Overview The Syllabus
11Learning Teams
- Learning teams are an essential part of the
academic experience of undergraduate students
and provide students an opportunity to develop
and refine teamwork skills. - Learning Teams will be given time in class to
coordinate activities, but are welcome to
communicate face-to-face, virtually, or
telephonically.
12Learning Teams
- Based on factors of your choosing (proximity,
prior team activity, commonality, etc.), select
your partners in learning for this class. - There will be 10 teams (5 teammates).
- Get to know one another.
- Select one member to introduce the team and
provide a brief description of why 1) The team
chose to be together, and 2) Why the team will be
successful.
13Transition to the Learning Experience
- This ends the orientation section of class number
one . . . Thank you . . . Now, lets take a 10
min break!!
14What is Organizational Behavior?
MGMT 4534 - Class 01 Material Greenberg Baron
/ Chapter 1 Part 1
15Learning Objectives
- Define the concepts of organization and
organizational behavior (OB). - Describe the field of organizational behaviors
commitment to the scientific method and the three
levels of analysis it uses. - Trace the historical developments and schools of
thought leading up to the field of organizational
behavior today. - Identify the fundamental assumptions of the field
of organizational behavior. - Describe how the field of OB today is being
shaped by the global economy, increasing racial
and ethnic diversity in the workforce, and
advances in technology. - Explain how rising expectations about quality and
socially responsible behavior have influenced the
field of OB.
16What is an Organization?
- A structured social system consisting of groups
and individuals working together to meet some
agreed-upon objectives.
17Organizational Behavior
- The field that seeks increased knowledge of all
aspects of behavior in organizational settings
through the use of the scientific method. - Characteristics of the field
- OB applies the scientific method to practical
managerial problems. - OB focuses on three levels of analysis.
- OB is multidisciplinary in nature.
- OB seeks to improve organizational effectiveness
and the quality of life at work.
18Practical Managerial Problems
- How can goals be set to enhance peoples job
performance? - How may jobs be designed so as to enhance
employees feelings of satisfaction? - Under what conditions do individuals make better
decisions than groups? - What can be done to improve the quality of
organizational communication? - What steps can be taken to alleviate work-related
stress? - How can leaders enhance the effectiveness of
their teams?
19Levels of Analysis in OB
20Multidisciplinary Roots
21Theory X vs. Theory Y
Theory X A traditional philosophy of management
suggesting that most people are lazy and
irresponsible and will work hard only when forced
to do so.
Theory Y A philosophy of management suggesting
that under the right circumstances people are
fully capable of working productively and
accepting responsibility for their work.
22Why is OB Important?
- Companies whose managers accurately appraise the
work of their subordinates enjoy lower costs and
higher productivity. - People who are satisfied with the way they are
treated on their jobs are more pleasant to work
with and less likely to quit. - People who are trained to work together tend to
be happier and more productive. - Employees who believe they have been treated
unfairly are more likely to steal and reject the
policies of their organizations. - People who are mistreated by their supervisors
have more mental and physical illnesses than
those who are treated with kindness, dignity, and
respect. - Organizations that offer good employee benefits
and have friendly conditions are more profitable
than those that are less people oriented.
23Fundamental Assumptions
- ? OB recognizes the dynamic nature of
organizations. - Open Systems Self-sustaining systems that
transform input from the external environment
into output, which the system then returns to the
environment. - ? OB assumes there is no one best approach
- Contingency Approach A perspective suggesting
that organizational behavior is affected by a
large number of interacting factors. How someone
will behave is said to be contingent upon many
different variables at once.
24The Open Systems Model
25The History of OB
- The Early Days Scientific Management and the
Hawthorne Studies - Classical Organizational Theory
- Late Twentieth Century Organizational Behavior
as a Social Science - OB Today The Infotech Age
26The Early Days
- Scientific Management An early approach to
management and organizational behavior
emphasizing the importance of designing jobs as
efficiently as possible. - Human Relations Movement A perspective on
organizational behavior that rejects the
primarily economic orientation of scientific
management and recognizes, instead, the
importance of social processes and work settings.
27Classical Organizational Theory
- An early approach to the study of management that
focused on the most efficient way of structuring
organizations. - Division of Labor The practice of dividing work
into specialized tasks that enable people to
specialize in what they do best. - Bureaucracy An organizational design developed
by Max Weber that attempts to make organizations
operate efficiently by having a clear hierarchy
of authority in which people are required to
perform well-defined jobs.
28Characteristics of an Ideal Bureaucracy
29Prominent Trends
- The rise of global businesses with culturally
diverse workforces. - Rapid advances in technology.
- The rising expectations of people in general.
30Globalization
- The process of interconnecting the worlds people
with respect to the cultural, economic,
political, technological, and environmental
aspects of their lives. - Multinational Enterprises Organizations that
have significant operations spread throughout
various nations but are headquartered in a single
country.
31Working Abroad
- Expatriates People who are citizens of one
country but who are living and working in another
country. - Culture The set of values, customs, and beliefs
that people have in common with other members of
a social unit (e.g., a nation). - Culture shock The tendency for people to become
confused and disoriented as they attempt to
adjust to a new culture. - Repatriation The process of readjusting to
ones own culture after spending time away from
it.
32Management Perspectives
- Convergence Hypothesis A biased approach to the
study of management, which assumes that
principles of good management are universal, and
that ones that work well in the United States
will apply equally well in other nations. - Divergence Hypothesis The approach to the study
of management that recognizes that knowing how to
manage most effectively requires clear
understanding of the culture in which people work.
33Shifting Demographics
- More women are in the workforce than ever before.
- Racial and ethnic diversity is reality.
- People are living and working longer than
ever before.
34The World At A GlanceIf you shrunk the worlds
population to a village of precisely 100 people,
with all of the existing ratios remaining the
same, it would look something like this
There would be
57 Asians 21 Europeans 14 from the Western
Hemisphere 8 Africans 52 Females 48 Males 70
Non-white 30 White 70 Non-Christian
30 Christian 89 Heterosexual 11 Homosexual 80
Substandard Housing 70 Unable to read 50
Malnutrition 1 Near death, 1 Near birth 1 College
education 1 Own a computer 6 People 59 of the
entire worlds wealth
35Discussion Question
- In preparing an organization to accept diversity,
do you think it is more important to change the
corporate culture or to change structures and
policies? Explain.
Chapter Discussion Question
36Responding to Changes in Technology
- Creating Leaner Organizations
- Downsizing/Rightsizing The process of adjusting
the number of employees needed to work in newly
designed organizations. - Outsourcing The process of eliminating those
parts of organizations that focus on noncore
sectors of the business and hiring outside firms
to perform these functions instead. - Creating Virtual Organizations
- Highly flexible, temporary organizations formed
by a group of companies that join forces to
exploit a specific opportunity. - Increasing the Use of Telecommuting
- The practice of using communications technology
so as to enable work to be performed from remote
locations.
37Responding to Changes in Expectations
- Increasing Flexibility in Response to Employees
Needs - The Quality Revolution
- Corporate Social Responsibility
38Increasing Flexibility
- Flextime Programs Policies that give employees
some discretion over when they can arrive and
leave work, thereby making it easier to adapt
their work schedules to the demands of their
personal lives. - The Contingent Workforce People hired by
organizations temporarily to work as needed for
finite periods of time. - Compressed Workweeks The practice of working
fewer days each week but longer hours each day. - Job Sharing A form of regular part-time work in
which pairs of employees assume the duties of a
single job, splitting its responsibilities,
salary, and benefits in proportion to the time
worked. - Voluntary Reduced Work Time Programs Programs
that allow employees to reduce the amount of time
they work by a certain amount, with a
proportional reduction in pay.
39The Quality Revolution
- Total Quality Management An organizational
strategy of commitment to improving customer
satisfaction by developing techniques to
carefully manage output quality. - Benchmarking The process of comparing ones own
products or services with the best from others. - Malcolm Baldridge Quality Award An award given
annually to American companies that practice
effective quality management and make significant
improvements in the quality of their goods and
services.
40Corporate Social Responsibility
- Business decision making linked to ethical
values, compliance with legal requirements, and
respect for individuals, the community at large,
and the environment. It involves operating a
business in a manner that meets or exceeds the
ethical, legal, and public expectations that
society has of business
41Ethics in Organizations
- Good ethics is good business
- Improved financial performance
- Reduced operating costs
- Enhanced corporate reputation
- Increased ability to attract and retain employees
- Code of Ethics A document describing what an
organization stands for and the general rules of
conduct it expects of its employees. - Ethics Officers Individuals (usually at the
vice presidential level) who oversee the ethics
of a companys operations. - Ethics Audit The process of actively
investigating and documenting incidents of
dubious ethical value within a company.
42The Ethical Organization
- Ethical individuals honest, have integrity,
strive for a high level of moral development - Ethical leadership provides the necessary
actions, committed to ethical values and helps
others to embody those values - Organizational structure embodies a code of
ethics, and methods to implement ethical behavior
43Discussion Question
- Do you believe it is ethical for companies to
compile portfolios of personal information on
their Web site visitors without informing them?
How about for organizations to monitor their
employees use of the Web? Discuss.
Discussion Question
44Ethics and the New Workplace
- Telecommuting, virtual work, and flexible hours
- Success of new programs depends on mutual trust - IT provides opportunities for monitoring
- Companies that make an unwavering commitment to
maintaining high standards of ethics and social
responsibility will lead the way toward a
brighter future for both business and society
45Ethical Guidelines
- Does the behavior violate the obvious shall
nots? - Will anyone get hurt?
- What if you did it 100 times?
- How would you feel if someone did it to you?
- Whats your gut feeling?
- Would the behavior pass the front page test?
46What is Organizational Behavior?
MGMT 4534 - Class 01 Material Greenberg Baron
/ Chapter 2 Part 2
47Perception and Learning
Understanding and Adapting to the Work Environment
48Learning Objectives
- Distinguish between the concepts of social
perception and social identity. - Explain how the attribution process works and
describe the various sources of bias in social
perception. - Understand how the process of social perception
operates in the context of performance
appraisals, employment interviews, and the
cultivation of corporate images. - Define learning and describe the two types most
applicable to OB operant conditioning and
observational learning. - Describe how principles of learning are involved
in organizational training and innovative reward
systems. - Compare the way organizations use reward in
organizational behavior management programs, how
they can use punishment most effectively when
administering discipline, and how they can manage
knowledge effectively.
49Social Identity Theory
- Personal Identity The characteristics that
define a particular individual. - Social Identity Who a person is, as defined in
terms of his or her membership in various social
groups. - Social Identity Theory A conceptualization
recognizing that the way we perceive others and
ourselves is based on our unique characteristics
and our membership in various groups.
50Social Identity Theory
51Social Perception
- Social Perception The process of combining,
integrating, and interpreting information about
others to gain an accurate understanding of them. - Attribution The process through which
individuals attempt to determine the causes
behind others behavior.
52Correspondent Inferences
- Judgments about peoples dispositions, traits,
and characteristics, that correspond to what we
have observed of their actions.
53Causal Attribution
- Causes of Behavior
- Internal Explanations based on actions for
which the individual is responsible. - External Explanations based on situations over
which the individual has no control. - Kelleys Theory of Causal Attribution The
approach suggesting that people will believe
others actions to be caused by internal or
external factors based on three types of
information consensus, consistency, and
distinctiveness.
54Kelleys Theory of Attribution
- Consensus Information regarding the extent to
which other people behave in the same manner as
the person being judged. - Consistency Information regarding the extent to
which the person being judged acts the same way
at other times. - Distinctiveness Information regarding the
extent to which a person behaves in the same
manner in other contexts.
55Kelleys Theory of Attribution
56Stereotypes
- Beliefs that all members of specific groups
share similar traits and are prone to behave the
same way.
57Perceptual Biases
- Predispositions that people have to misperceive
others in various ways. - Types include
- Fundamental attribution error
- Halo effect
- Similar-to-me effect
- First impression error
- Selective perception
58Fundamental Attribution Error
- The tendency to attribute others actions to
internal causes (e.g., their traits) while
largely ignoring external factors that also may
have influenced behavior.
59Halo Effect
- The tendency for our overall impressions of
others to affect objective evaluations of their
specific traits perceiving high correlations
between characteristics that may be unrelated.
60Similar-to-Me Effect
- The tendency for people to perceive in a
positive light others who are believed to be
similar to themselves in any of several different
ways.
61Selective Perception
- The tendency to focus on some aspects of the
environment while ignoring others.
62First Impression Error
- The tendency to base our judgments of others on
our earlier impressions of them.
63Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
- Self-Fulfilling Prophecy The tendency for
someones expectations about another to cause
that person to behave in a manner consistent with
those expectations. - Pygmalion Effect A positive instance of the
self-fulfilling prophecy, in which people holding
high expectations of another tend to improve that
individuals performance. - Golem Effect A negative instance of the
self-fulfilling prophecy, in which people holding
low expectations of another tend to lower that
individuals performance.
64Overcoming Biases
- Do not overlook the external cases of others
behaviors. - Identify your stereotypes.
- Evaluate people based on objective factors.
- Avoid making rash judgments.
65Organizational Applications
- Performance Appraisal The process of evaluating
employees on various work-related dimensions. - An inherently biased process
- Impresssion Management Efforts by individuals
(esp. in employment interviews) to improve how
they appear to others. - Corporate Image The impressions that people
have of an organization.
66Learning Concepts
- Learning A relatively permanent change in
behavior occurring as a result of experience. - Operant Conditioning The form of learning in
which people associate the consequences of their
actions with the actions themselves. - Behaviors with positive consequences are
acquired. - Behaviors with negative consequences tend to be
eliminated.
67Operant Conditioning Process
68Reinforcement Concepts
- Positive Reinforcement The process by which
people learn to perform behaviors that lead to
the presentation of desired outcomes. - Negative Reinforcement The process by which
people learn to perform acts that lead to the
removal of undesired events.
69Punishment and Extinction
- Punishment Decreasing undesirable behavior by
following it with undesirable consequences. - Extinction The process through which responses
that are no longer reinforced tend to gradually
diminish in strength.
70Schedules of Reinforcement
- Rules governing the timing and frequency of the
administration of reinforcement. - Continuous Reinforcement A schedule of
reinforcement in which all desired behaviors are
reinforced. - Partial Reinforcement A schedule of
reinforcement in which only some desired
behaviors are reinforced.
71Fixed Interval Schedules
- Schedules of reinforcement in which a fixed
period of time must elapse between the
administration of reinforcements.
72Variable Interval Schedules
- Schedules of reinforcement in which a variable
period of time (based on some average) must
elapse between the administration of
reinforcements.
73Fixed Ratio Schedules
- Schedules of reinforcement in which a fixed
number of responses must occur between the
administration of reinforcements.
74Variable Ratio Schedules
- Schedules of reinforcement in which a variable
number of responses (based on some average) must
occur between the administration of
reinforcements.
75Observational Learning
- The form of learning in which people acquire
new behaviors by systematically observing the
rewards and punishments given to others.
76Applications of Learning
- Training
- Innovative Reward Systems
- Organizational Behavior Management
- Discipline
- Knowledge Management
77Training
- The process of systematically teaching employees
to acquire and improve job-related skills and
knowledge. - Types of training
- Classroom training
- Apprenticeship programs
- Cross-cultural training
- Executive training programs
- Corporate universities
- E-training
78Keys to Effective Training
- Participation Active involvement in the process
of learning more active participation leads to
more effective learning. - Repetition The process of repeatedly performing
a task so that it may be learned. - Transfer of Training The degree to which the
skills learned during training sessions may be
applied to performance on ones job. - Feedback Knowledge of the results of ones
behavior.
79Innovative Reward Systems
- Skill-Based Pay An innovative reward system
in which people are paid based on the number of
different skills they have learned relevant to
performing one or more jobs in the organization. - Team-Based Rewards Innovative reward systems
in which employees are paid on the basis of their
teams performance.
80Organizational Behavior Management
- The practice of altering behavior in
organizations by systematically administering
rewards.
81Discipline
- The process of systematically administering
punishment. - Progressive Discipline The practice of
gradually increasing the severity of punishments
for employees who exhibit unacceptable job
behavior.
82Continuum of Disciplinary Measures
83Using Punishment Effectively
- Deliver punishment immediately after the
undesirable response occurs. - Give moderate levels of punishment nothing too
high or too low. - Punish the undesirable behavior, not the person.
- Use punishment consistently across occasions.
- Punish everyone equally for the same infraction.
- Clearly communicate the reasons for the
punishment given. - Do not follow punishment with noncontingent
rewards.
84Knowledge Management
- The process of gathering, organizing, and sharing
a companys information and knowledge assets. - Intellectual Capital Areas of expertise
represented by the employees within a company. - Knowledge Managers Individuals who are
responsible for organizing the wealth of
corporate knowledge represented by its people and
ensuring that this information gets used
effectively.