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Professionalism and Personal Skills

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Understand the viewpoints of NT and Employment ... Styled. Clear. University of Sunderland. Professionalism and Personal Skills. Unit 10 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Professionalism and Personal Skills


1
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Professionalism and Personal Skills 10
  • New Technology Employment
  • Report Writing

2
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Objectives
  • By the end of this lecture the student should
  • Understand NT in perspective
  • Understand the viewpoints of NT and Employment
  • Appreciate the main points of the Deskilling
    Debate
  • Appreciate the Industrial Relations implications
  • Understand the essentials elements of a good
    report
  • Appreciate how reports have the same fundamental
    structure

3
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • NT and Employment Overview
  • There are many debates concerning NT and its
    impact on the working environment whether
    positive or negative
  • It is the aim of this lecture to examine these
    debates and stimulate responses to them

4
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Introduction
  • NT in perspective
  • Viewpoints of NT and Employment
  • De-Skilling Debate
  • Why Introduce NT?
  • Industrial Relations Implications
  • Trade Union Roles

5
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Viewpoints of NT and Employment
  • (See Chapter 3 Rowe and Thompson)
  • Optimistic Viewpoint
  • Pessimistic Viewpoint

6
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Impact of Technology on Work Tasks
  • (The Deskilling Debate)
  • The Deskilling of Work tasks Argument
  • The Reskilling Argument

7
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Why Introduce New Technology?
  • Changing Patterns of Work
  • Time/Space Considerations
  • Discussion Point
  • What are the main reasons organisations introduce
    NT?

8
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Why Introduce New Technology? (cont)
  • Buchanan and Boddy, give 3 categorisations
  • 1 Strategic
  • 2 Operating
  • 3 Control Objectives
  • Other Studies have broadly confirmed these
    categorisations
  • McCloughlin Clark "Technological Change at
    Work" suggests control is too simplistic a view

9
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Industrial Relations Implications
  • Daniel W.W. (1987) argues that Technological
    Change is a Technical Matter
  • Should involve people
  • So why not personnel managers?
  • Executive level decisions on IT
  • Overall
  • In many cases the implementation strategy for NT
    can leave managers considerable scope for
    manoeuvring

10
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Trade Union Roles
  • Highest factor against NT and Change
  • Modern Trade Unions are seen to have had a
    Luddite attitude towards NT
  • Bargaining position of Trade Unions affects
    outcome
  • Quick to realise implications of NT
  • TUC produced a checklist for NT agreements

11
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Trade Union Roles (cont)
  • TUC urged Trade Unions to negotiate over
    introduction of NT
  • TUC tried to maintain the Status Quo
  • Unions drew up their own responses
  • Most bargaining used old procedures, not new

12
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Trade Union Roles (cont)
  • General Conclusion Not Effective
    (McCloughlin Clark, 1998)
  • Why did Trade Union response have so little
    impact?
  • Government Change
  • from Labour to Conservative
  • TU Membership fell

13
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Trade Union Conclusion
  • Managers in non-unionised companies consult less
    than in unionised
  • Non-unionised employees seem to do just as well
    as unionised
  • Trade Unions have little influence of course of
    technological change

14
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • What is a Report?
  • A Definition
  • A report is a communication of information or
    advice, from a person who has collected and
    studied the facts, to a person who has asked for
    the report because they need it for a specific
    purpose.
  • Using this definition what reports have you
    produced?

15
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Types of Report
  • Reports can be transmitted in the forms of
  • Conversations
  • Demonstrations
  • Letters
  • Memos
  • fill-in-forms
  • many-page documents

16
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • How can we Classify a Report?
  • Length
  • Tone
  • Subject matter
  • Timing
  • Importance
  • Style
  • Distribution

17
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Essentials of a Good Report
  • It should be -
  • Unified
  • Complete
  • Accurate
  • Planned
  • Styled
  • Clear

18
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • What is the purpose of the Report?
  • Why is the report required?
  • Who exactly is it for?
  • What do they want it for?

19
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Fundamental Structure

Parts
Elements
Title Page /Abstract
Terms of Reference or Objectives. Procedure or
Method
Introduction
Body of the Report
Findings
Conclusions, Recommendations (if
requested),
Appendices and References
Final Section
20
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Abstract
  • Should be able to be read separately
  • Not an Introduction
  • A summary
  • An advert
  • Avoid future tense
  • Avoid This paper
  • No references

21
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Introduction
  • Clear unambiguous statement of the subject
  • Indication of the purpose
  • Brief description of the methods to be used
  • Announcement of the plan

22
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Body of the Report
  • This is the report proper
  • Several sections
  • All of the facts
  • the character of the investigation
  • detailed explanation of methodology
  • procedure followed
  • results obtained
  • Critical Analysis

23
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Final Section
  • Characteristics
  • Introduces nothing new
  • Harmonises with the introduction
  • Harmonises with the body of the report
  • Leaves final impression

24
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Format
  • Layout
  • Headings
  • Numbering

25
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Section Headings
  • Typography and Spacing
  • Fussiness
  • Independent
  • Words or phrases
  • Concise

26
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Long Formal Reports
  • Typical Structure
  • Preliminaries
  • Title page
  • Authorisation
  • Table of contents
  • List of tables and figures
  • Acknowledgements
  • Summary

27
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Long Formal Reports
  • Typical Structure
  • Main Report
  • Introduction
  • Findings and discussion
  • Conclusions and/or recommendations

28
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Long Formal Reports
  • Typical Structure
  • Supplements
  • References and bibliography
  • Appendices
  • Index

29
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • How to get started
  • Setting objective
  • Researching and assembling material
  • Organising material and planning report
  • Writing first draft
  • Editing report
  • Producing report

30
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Title Page
  • What is it about?
  • Who wrote it?
  • For Whom?
  • From where?
  • When?

31
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • References - Five rules
  • 1 Any work not your own should be clearly marked
  • 2 Any quotations within quotation marks
  • 3 Every reference in the text should be listed
  • 4 Every item in the list must have a reference
    in the text
  • 5 Every figure or photograph must have a
    reference in the text

32
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Format
  • Author, title, publisher, date of publication
  • For example
  • Gowers, Sir Ernest, Complete Plain Words, Penguin
    Books, 1995

33
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • Bibliography
  • Is optional, and provides a guide to background
    reading around the report

34
Professionalism and Personal Skills
  • SUMMARY
  • Objectives
  • Understand NT in perspective
  • Understand the viewpoints of NT and Employment
  • Appreciate the main points of the Deskilling
    Debate
  • Appreciate the Industrial Relations implications
  • Understand the essentials elements of a good
    report
  • Appreciate how reports have the same fundamental
    structure
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