Sunday, May 12, 2013

Final grades and best wishes

 Final grades and best wishes

Your final grades and all their component scores are now accessible from the Blackboard "My Grades" tab. (See note** below.) If you did not receive credit for any assignment or other obligation you completed, please let the TAs know right away.  If you're just realizing now that you have no clicker points, email the TAs and include your class time and clicker number.  They will adjust your Total Clicker Points, your raw grade, and your letter grade, if necessary.


I enjoyed teaching you and invite you to keep me abreast of your successes and challenges in the future. The TAs and course clerks join me in wishing you an enjoyable summer and a future of good health and prosperity. Special best wishes to those of you who are graduating this semester.


I am in my office much of the time when school is in session and fairly often during breaks, and you are always welcome to email me or come in to discuss topics from the course or other matters.   It is usually best to call first, especially during any school vacations. I'll be in my office this coming week, but I suggest you call or email for an appointment if you want to meet with me then.  I will be away from my office for much of the week following commencement.    I expect to answer my email at least a few times a day, maybe as regularly as I do during the school year.


ANSWER SHEETS: I plan to dispose of all unreturned 1a, 2a, and 3a exams by June 1. The papers include students' names, grades, and Albany IDs. In order to protect your privacy, I have them sent to a secure disposal facility. If you’d rather handle these documents yourself, either come in soon to get them or email me a request to hold them for you until it is convenient for you to come for them.


(As a privacy advocate, I instituted this policy years ago to protect people's Social Security numbers. Almost nobody took me up on it then, nor has anyone done so since we changed to local ID's. Still, if you want your in-term exams and scantrons and neglected to get them when I returned them in class, feel free to request them.)


I may post one last message on this BMgt341-L distribution list before it expires over the summer.


Again, my best to you always.
Prof. M. Fogelman

**Note regarding students’ Blackboard --> My Grades listing: Exam average is calculated using Exam 1, Exam 2 and Exam 3 values.  Each of these is the higher score of a pair, 1a/1b, 2a/2b, and 3a/3b, respectively.  Also, please ignore the denominators following the actual grades.  Though they are supposed to indicate “points possible," they are often inaccurate.  These errors are due in part to Blackboard's inability to account for my practice of selecting the higher one of each pair of grades.


If you wish to recalculate your final grade on your own...


Average the higher of each pair exams 1a/1b, 2a/2b, and 3a/3b (those higher values also appear on MyGrades as exams 1, 2, and 3).



    Start with 75% of the average of exams 1, 2, and 3.

    Add your clicker-based course points (10% of your total clicks up to a maximum of 15)
    Add your total assignment points (from zero to 10, in half-point intervals;) 
    Add your hotseat points  (0, 2.5, or 5.0)

Round any final numeric total ending in .50 or higher  up to the next whole number.


Locate your total on this table, from page 3 of the course syllabus you received at our first class:

92-100+  A
90-91      A-
87-89      B+
83-86      B
80-82      B-
77-79      C+
73-76      C
70-72      C-
60-69      D
Below 60  E



Friday, May 10, 2013

Final grades currently suppressed

Final grades currently suppressed

Some calculated grade values have been suppressed and will not be accessible until later this weekend.


I prevent students from seeing these results while we process final grades.  This precaution avoids confusion while each final exam grade--1b, 2b, and 3b--is being uploaded and your associated term averages and letter grades get recalculated and released. 


There will be an announcement here when your final, post-exam grades are finished and open for viewing. 


Best...mf

Thursday, May 9, 2013

More student questions re final exam

More student questions re final exam



***EXAM 3B***


Q: I was just wondering how familiar we should be with the strategic intelligence reporting examples presented in session 20, like customer churn reports, transaction reports, retention reports, lifetime value reports, and cross shopping analysis. It doesn't say anything on the review about them, but I just wanted to be sure because there were a few on previous exams.

A: You don’t need to know a lot of specifics about those particular reports and analyses.  Just know in general how his big-data-based decisions are planned and carried out…and how those methods might differ from some of the other decision strategies we’ve seen.

---------------------------------------------

A FEW STATEMENTS AND ITEMS I REVIEWED FROM ONE STUDENT...
IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER

Among the Big Five, which dimension had the strongest positive correlation with overall job and training performance?     

A. Conscientiousness 

Self talk tends to be 
A. Self fulfilling prophecy

“Observing one's own behavior and adapting it to the situation” is the definition of 
A. SELF MONITORING

The early job redesign effort which most clearly associated with F. W. Taylor’s theoretical model is ______. 
A. job simplification

The method of motivation Sidney Harman discusses as a team-wide cost-savings benefit may be referred to as ______ .

A. gain sharing

The _______ need in Alderfer's ERG theory corresponds to Maslow's physiological and safety needs. 
A. existence

 _________ refers to the extent to which the job affects the lives of other people within or outside the organization.  

A. TASK SIGNFICANCE
 
In the traditional career life cycle discussed in class, one tends to identify one’s interests and skills during the __________ stage.  
A. EXPLORATION

Among the time management and other self-management techniques recommended in class readings is ___________ .  
A. Workout why you're procrastinating

......................

As discussed in class..

A. When you work for yourself, being able to hire anyone you want—including friends and relatives—is not always an advantage. 

According to research, goal difficulty is __________ related to performance. 

A. positively? (Because when the difficulty of the goal increases so does the performance.) 

The process of rewarding closer and closer approximations to a target behavior is called _________ .  
A. SHAPING

 
Field of organizational behavior relies on__
A.Studies individual, small group, and larger organizational processes.
 
E business implications __
a)Time zones, facilities, and location are not always “hard” constraints on accomplishing tasks.
 
A self sufficient organization is called a closed system.
 
According to the text, _______ organizations are fluid and flexible networks of talented people
A. Organic
 
Divisional organizations may be departmentalized by :

A. Region, customer, product line

which strengthen behavior?
 Positive reinforcement and negative reinforcement  


John Kotter's Model of Change? Urgency, power coalition, VISION FOR CHANGE, communicate vision, remove obstacles.. etc.


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Important final exam reminders and student questions (1)

Important final exam reminders and student questions (1)


***Please do not forget to bring your ID card***


 INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE FRONT PAGE OF FINAL EXAM 1b, 2b, and 3b...



B Mgt 341 – 5/10/2013 - Finals 1b, 2b, 3b


REMOVING ANY QUESTION SHEET FROM THE EXAMINATION ROOM WILL RESULT IN A FAILING COURSE GRADE AND JUDICIAL ACTION!!!

1.   Pick up answer sheets as you exchange your picture id for this question sheet packet. ALL FINAL EXAMS IN THIS PACKET ARE VERSION {your version number}
3.   Write one of the following six section identification lines across the top of side one of each answer sheet you use:

Section 3278 (8:45)
3278     Exam 1b (5)
3278     Exam 2b (6)
3278     Exam 3b (7)

Section 4582 (10:15)
4582     Exam 1b (5)

4582     Exam 2b (6)

4582     Exam 3b (7)

4.   Answer the exam questions on 1b, 2b and/or 3b in any order you like, selecting the best answer for each question.
5.   When you are completely finished, stand up, put your pencils away, retrieve your belongings, and go to the back of the room.
6.   Place your answer sheets in the appropriate file boxes or piles (1b, 2b, and 3b).
7. Exchange this question sheet packet for your ID card before leaving. 

Please read and sign the following declaration:  I understand that I may review my exam by appointment until noon on Wednesday, May 15, and I may initiate an appeal of final exam questions through Thursday, May 16.  Outside of normal class and online materials, I obtained no advance knowledge of any questions.  Missing or incorrect entries for (1) my ID number, (2) my name, or (3) the exam version number may cause that exam grade to be reduced by 3 points.        _____________________________________ Signed
 




A few questions answered, and some other exam 1b/2b/3b helpful hints...

***EXAM 1B***

Q: Is Hofstede a folk hero? What should we know about his national culture framework?
A: Yes, he's a folk hero, and you should be able to recognize what he means by the 5 dimensions that make up his framework: masculinity/femininity, individualism/collectivism, etc.

Hofstede's Framework for Assessing Culture

Hofstede has found five dimensions of culture in his study of national work related values. Replication studies have yielded similar results, pointing to stability of the dimensions across time. The dimensions are:

Small vs. large power distance
How much the less powerful members of institutions and organizations expect and accept that power is distributed unequally. In cultures with small power distance (e.g. Australia, Austria, Denmark, Ireland, New Zealand), people expect and accept power relations that are more consultative or democratic. People relate to one another more as equals regardless of formal positions. Subordinates are more comfortable with and demand the right to contribute to and critique the decisions of those in power. In cultures with large power distance (e.g. Malaysia), the less powerful accept power relations that are autocratic or paternalistic. Subordinates acknowledge the power of others based on their formal, hierarchical positions. Thus, Small vs. Large Power Distance does not measure or attempt to measure a culture's objective, "real" power distribution, but rather the way people perceive power differences.



Individualism vs. collectivism
How much members of the culture define themselves apart from their group memberships. In individualist cultures, people are expected to develop and display their individual personalities and to choose their own affiliations. In collectivist cultures, people are defined and act mostly as a member of a long-term group, such as the family, a religious group, an age cohort, a town, or a profession, among others. This dimension was found to move towards the individualist end of the spectrum with increasing national wealth.



Masculinity vs. femininity
The value placed on traditionally male or female values (as understood in most Western cultures). In so-called 'masculine' cultures, people (whether male or female) value competitiveness, assertiveness, ambition, and the accumulation of wealth and material possessions. In so-called 'feminine' cultures, people (again whether male or female) value relationships and quality of life. This dimension is often renamed by users of Hofstede's work, e.g. to Quantity of Life vs. Quality of Life. Another reading of the same dimension holds that in 'M' cultures, the differences between gender roles are more dramatic and less fluid than in 'F' cultures; but this strongly depends on other dimensions as well.


Weak vs. strong uncertainty avoidance
How much members of a society are anxious about the unknown, and as a consequence, attempt to cope with anxiety by minimizing uncertainty. In cultures with strong uncertainty avoidance, people prefer explicit rules (e.g. about religion and food) and formally structured activities, and employees tend to remain longer with their present employer. In cultures with weak uncertainty avoidance, people prefer implicit or flexible rules or guidelines and informal activities. Employees tend to change employers more frequently.


Michael Harris Bond and his collaborators subsequently found a fifth dimension which was initially called Confucian dynamism. Hofstede later incorporated this into his framework as:

Long vs. short term orientation
A society's "time horizon," or the importance attached to the future versus the past and present. In long term oriented societies, people value actions and attitudes that affect the future: persistence/perseverance, thrift, and shame. In short term oriented societies, people value actions and attitudes that are affected by the past or the present: normative statements, immediate stability, protecting one's own face, respect for tradition, and reciprocation of greetings, favors, and gifts.


These cultural differences describe averages or tendencies and not characteristics of individuals. A Japanese person for example can have a very low 'uncertainty avoidance' compared to a Filipino person even though their 'national' cultures point strongly in a different direction. Consequently, a country's scores should not be interpreted as deterministic.

Q: What do we need to know about e-business?
A: Know how it differs from e-commerce, and also how its growth will affect decision making, knowledge management, organizational structure, and other facets associated with organizational behavior. From that same chapter, note the way future ("21st century") managers will evolve from what past managers had to be.

***EXAM 2B***

Q: What do we have to know about expectancy theory, and is Vroom a folk hero?
A: Vroom's not a folk hero, but you should understand what expectancy, instrumentality, and valence mean in that context and how they combine as factors in motivation.
----------------------------------

Q: What do we need to know about the "psychological contract"?
A: Understand what it is and how it's applied--both the "traditional" psy contract and what we refer to in class and the notes as the "modern version" (the one I sometimes associate with Jack Welch), which looks at loyalty in a different way from how the traditional version looks at it.



***EXAM 3B***

Q: Do we need to know much about the specific influence tactics and political tactics?
A:  You do need to recognize these political tactics and remember which is most and least frequently used in organizations--according to the research reviewed in the text. Identifying influence tactics and how each is used in the workplace is also a good idea.
----------------------------------------------
Q: Do we need to know the steps to the rational decision making process?  (There are 4 in the text and 6 in the notes.)
A: Yes you do, and the 4 in the text are a lot like the 5 in the notes.  You don't have to know the 6th step from Dr. Ken, as that applies in particular to the strict data-based method used in his business.

-----------------------------------------------
Q: What do we need to know about the group development stages? (storming, norming, etc.)
A: Just have a good idea what happens during each stage, as we discussed in class. A more detailed discussion, mostly from Wikipedia, follows:
------------------------------------------
Q: Can you explain the differences between Market culture, hierarchy culture, stability performance, adhocracy culture.
A: Those terms are in the readings and the video from session 6.
-------------------------
Q: Does IDEO have to do mainly with expertise?
A: If you watch the first and last few minutes of the "Nightline" video withn Session 17, you'll get the idea of IDEO.
---------------------------
Q: Re: logrolling.  Is this saying that members playing around for their own benefit can throw another members thinking off track because their project or something they are interested in might be affected negatively?
A: You're about right on that.  It affects their decisions because they're exchanging favors instead of reflecting on the merits of the argument, project, etc.
-------------------------------------
Tuckman's Group Development Model
Forming
In the first stages of team building, the forming of the team takes place. The individual's behavior is driven by a desire to be accepted by the others, and avoid controversy or conflict. Serious issues and feelings are avoided, and people focus on being busy with routines, such as team organization, who does what, when to meet, etc. But individuals are also gathering information and impressions - about each other, and about the scope of the task and how to approach it. This is a comfortable stage to be in, but the avoidance of conflict and threat means that not much actually gets done.

The team meets and learns about the opportunities and challenges, and then agrees on goals and begins to tackle the tasks. Team members tend to behave quite independently. They may be motivated but are usually relatively uninformed of the issues and objectives of the team. Team members are usually on their best behavior but very focused on themselves. Mature team members begin to model appropriate behavior even at this early phase. Sharing the knowledge of the concept of "Teams - Forming, Storming, Norming, Performing" is extremely helpful to the team.
Supervisors of the team tend to need to be directive during this phase.

The forming stage of any team is important because, in this stage, the members of the team get to know one another, exchange some personal information, and make new friends. This is also a good opportunity to see how each member of the team works as an individual and how they respond to pressure.
Storming
Every group will next enter the storming stage in which different ideas compete for consideration. The team addresses issues such as what problems they are really supposed to solve, how they will function independently and together and what leadership model they will accept. Team members open up to each other and confront each other's ideas and perspectives. In some cases storming can be resolved quickly. In others, the team never leaves this stage. The maturity of some team members usually determines whether the team will ever move out of this stage. Some team members will focus on minutiae to evade real issues.

The storming stage is necessary to the growth of the team. It can be contentious, unpleasant and even painful to members of the team who are averse to conflict. Tolerance of each team member and their differences should be emphasized. Without tolerance and patience the team will fail. This phase can become destructive to the team and will lower motivation if allowed to get out of control. Some teams will never develop past this stage.

Supervisors of the team during this phase may be more accessible, but tend to remain directive in their guidance of decision-making and professional behavior. The team members will therefore resolve their differences and members will be able to participate with one another more comfortably. The ideal is that they will not feel that they are being judged, and will therefore share their opinions and views.
Norming
The team manages to have one goal and come to a mutual plan for the team at this stage. Some may have to give up their own ideas and agree with others in order to make the team function. In this stage, all team members take the responsibility and have the ambition to work for the success of the team's goals.
Performing
It is possible for some teams to reach the performing stage. These high-performing teams are able to function as a unit as they find ways to get the job done smoothly and effectively without inappropriate conflict or the need for external supervision. By this time, they are motivated and knowledgeable. The team members are now competent, autonomous and able to handle the decision-making process without supervision. Dissent is expected and allowed as long as it is channeled through means acceptable to the team.

Supervisors of the team during this phase are almost always participative. The team will make most of the necessary decisions. Even the most high-performing teams will revert to earlier stages in certain circumstances. Many long-standing teams go through these cycles many times as they react to changing circumstances. For example, a change in leadership may cause the team to revert to storming as the new people challenge the existing norms and dynamics of the team.
When they do come up at this stage, conflicts and boundary disputes are handled constructively and efficiently.
Adjourning …
In 1977, Tuckman, jointly with Mary Ann Jensen, added a fifth stage to the 4 stages: adjourning, that involves completing the task and breaking up the team.
-----------------------------------------
Q: For the exam do I need to know the definition for the alternative styles of conflict, integrating, obliging etc as well as the 3rd party interventions or do I just need to know that they are alternative styles and 3rd party interventions?

A: Yes, you need to know those definitions, at least in terms of how those conflict handling styles reflect the two "concerns for..." dimensions.  These chapter 8 items--several with more than one name--were reviewed in class session 17, during session 22, on the 3a/3b Conflict/Negotiation review slide and its educreations video...
Different conflict handling styles and other terms from the virtual session: forcing, compromising, integrating—all those definitions listed in the slide…and how they are categorized along two dimensions.

Questions on those 3rd party alternative dispute interventions are a growing phenomenon that appears on nearly all my segment 3 exams, and this term's exam 3b won't be an exception. 

Monday, May 6, 2013

More about review materials for the final exam (5/10 at 8 a.m.)

More about review materials for the final exam (Friday, 5/10 at 8 a.m.)...

The following four exam 1b and 2b review files are available on electronic reserve:

Exam 1b *and* Exam 2b review videos combined (Requires free RealPlayer software)
        ## Exam 2b review begins at 13:13, but all  
             students should view the intro at 00:00 ##
 Exam 1b review slides
 Exam 2b review slides
 Exam 2b review video (Requires free RealPlayer software)
        ## All students should view the intro at 00:00 in
             Exam 1b *and* Exam 2b review ##

Exam 3b review materials, a ppt file on ERes and the video files, are the same ones we used for exam 3a.  You can access those video files--an intro, plus
Exam 3a-3b (1) through Exam 3a-3b (7)--from our educreations.com web page.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Pre-exam "final" grades are posted

Pre-exam "final" grades are posted

Your grades are all posted and released, and they should reflect all but the most recently approved grade book corrections. Good work on the part of our teaching assistants and the test scoring office has enabled us to score and post the exam 3a grades and publish all this information quickly.

Students should not delay in identifying any unaccounted for hotseat credit, assignment point, or other grade component.

All grade recording problems should be reported to the TAs by Wednesday, May 8, at mgt341ga@yahoo.com.  If there are still any students who have failed to check the weekly clicker points spreadsheets all semester and just now discover they have no clicker credit, they should EMAIL THEIR CLICKER NUMBER AND CLASS TIME TO THE TAs .  The TAs will look up how many points that clicker earned, add the 6 free ones, and post your credit.

Of course, you are always welcome to contact me regarding course matters or other topics of interest. (This is a lifetime guarantee.)

The column named "B Clicker points to add" reflects 0.10 course points per click up to a maximum of 15.00 course points for students credited with 150 or more total clicks. There were 170 all together--including 6 free clicks included in everyone's earned totals.

Column “C Blackboard Contribution” is your point total from assignments 1 through 10 (actually 1-9, with the last one awarded for free.

Your actual earned grade appears in the row titled “E Raw Term Grade (A+B+C+D).

Following this raw term grade is a column labeled “Final Letter Grade.” It displays the letter grade you have earned up to this point. 

A FINAL GRADE SHOULD CHANGE ONLY IF SOMETHING OCCURS TO INCREASE ONE OR MORE OF ITS COMPONENTS. The most likely reason to increase it is a student's improved performance on one, two, or  three of the "second chance" finals to be given on FRIDAY, MAY 10 at 8 A.M. Since students could earn up to 30.0 “free” points in addition to an extra five points on each exam--and given the fact that you get another chance to demonstrate your knowledge on any or all three course segments--there is no point asking for a higher letter grade if the one you earned falls just short of the next cutoff point. In most cases, the letter grade awarded is already one or more intervals higher than your exam average, or if the maximum grade possible had been 100% instead of 108.75 we are using.

CERTAIN GRADE COMPONENTS WILL NOT BE VIEWABLE FOR SEVERAL HOURS FOR SOME PERIOD OF TIME BETWEEN MAY 10 AND MAY 13. I suppress these results then to prevent confusion while final exam grades 1b, 2b, and 3b are being uploaded and the resulting term averages and letter grades recalculated.

If you want to verify the grade calculations, you can enter your scores in the "final grade calculator" spreadsheet on e-reserve.  You can also run the numbers yourself using the formula first explained when we reviewed page 3 of our syllabus during session #1:

Compute your Actual Term Grade by totaling these four numbers…
   75% of your exam average, plus
   Total assignment points (maximum = 10), plus
   Hotseat points (generally 0 or 5), plus
   Total clicker points times .01 (to a maximum of 15.00).

Locate that sum on this table, also from page 3 of the course syllabus you received before our first class meeting:
92-100+  A
90-91      A-
87-89      B+
83-86      B
80-82      B-
77-79      C+
73-76      C 
70-72      C-
60-69      D
Below 60  E

As was noted early on and throughout the semester, final grade percents ending in .50 or higher--not .4999--are rounded up to the next whole number.

Good luck to those who will be taking our final (Exams 1b, 2b, and/or 3b). If I won't get a chance to see you in our last class or at the exam—FRIDAY, MAY 10 at 8 a.m.—I wish you the best in your other courses and in all your future endeavors.

Prof. M. Fogelman

Monday, April 29, 2013

Some Exam 3a questions from students






1) What is high and low cohesiveness, and what is the relationship between cohesiveness, performance norms and productivity?

The relationship is depicted in a matrix in the session 18 notes, and other aspects of cohesiveness are discussed in that day's chapter and the slides.
------------------------------
2) I am still confused on what the IDEO process is, I read a about it, but I still don't quite understand what it is. I was wondering if you can explain that to me a little.

A significant portion of the session 17 streaming video on Electronic Reserve addresses the IDEO case and it's "deep dive" process.
------------------------------
3) what is logrolling? 

The term is defined in chapter 7 of the text--and listed in the index.
---------------------------------
Can you explain John Kotter's views of relationship development. 

Kotter is the Harvard professor interviewed in the "leadership" case we viewed in class session 24.  He talked about "leadership development" and gave examples like GE's Jack Welch and Panasonic's Konosuke Matsushita.  What made them great leaders?
-------------------------------
On slide 3 of the clicker questions my friend and I were debating back and forth between Storming and Norming as the correct answer.
"Conflicts and job boundary disputes are handled constructively and efficiently" is a direct quote from the text, and not for either of the alternatives you sugested.
----------------------------------------
As well, slide 14 about IDEO we were unsure about which answer was definitely correct.
The answer is none of the above, and actual correct answer is implied in chapter 7 and stated explicitly in the IDEO video (the session 17 video on electronic reserve).
------------------------------------------

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Clicker questions are on Electronic Reserve

You can now review all the clicker questions from our third course segment, sessions 17 through 25, with a few extra questions thrown in. 

The item's title is "17-25 Clicker Questions." 

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Exam 3a-3b review materials are now online

These review items are now available:

Exam 3a-3b powerpoint review slides have been uploaded to Electronic Reserve

A lecture-capture session for each slide is now on educreations.com.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Videos to view before 4/23 Flip Session on Leadership



Flip Session 24 videos are now available on educreations.com.

The five lecture capture videos, titled Leadership (a) through Leadership (e), are now available at
http://www.educreations.com/course/lessons/4005959/

Although they don't appear in alpha sequence (sorry about that), it is recommended that you view them in order. 

Very brief additional readings on Groups/Teams and Power/Politics, as promised...

Very brief additional readings on Groups/Teams and Power/Politics, as promised...mf


GROUPS AND TEAMWORK

Here is a more precise set of definitions associated with "autonomy," a key means of categorizing work groups and teams (see the "Autonomy: A Key Dimension" powepoint in the session 18 topics slides).

Traditional work groups are the least autonomous:  two or more people work together to achieve a shared goal.  They generally have no direct responsibility or control over the work and how it is carried out, but  they are responsible, sometimes jointly, for "executing the task."

Employee involvement teams meet on company time  weekly or  monthly  to provide advice or make suggestions to management regarding work and production issues, e.g.  plant safety, customer relations, or product quality. They have no authority, however,  to make decisions or take ownership of the process."

Semi-autonomous work groups do not not just give advice and suggestions to management, but they have authority to make some of what were traditionally considered management decisions and  to solve problems regarding product/service tasks. They are likely to receive budget,  work quality and performance, and competition information.

Self-managing teams -  Members manage and control all  majors tasks  related to a product or service (acquisition of materials, manufacturing and delivery, etc. ).without prior management approval. 

Self-designing teams have all the characteristics of self-managing teams, but they can also control and change the design of the teams themselves, the tasks they do and how they do them, and who belongs to the teams.

POWER AND POLITICS

Chester Barnard: compliance and the "zone of indifference"  http://www.vectorstudy.com/management_gurus/chester_barnard.htm

Niccolo Machiavelli: importance of "the leader" and "the end justifies the means"
 http://www.philosophypages.com/ph/macv.htm

Stanley Milgram: loyalty, discipline, self-sacrifice, and his "theory of obedience"
http://muskingum.edu/~psych/psycweb/history/milgram.htm

Thursday, April 4, 2013

one more exam 2a question answered

Q: Older ( age +45) workers tend to be absent ________ more often than younger ones.

What is the percentage?

When older workers are hired, they tend to remain with their companies _______ as long as do younger ones.

What is the %?

A: As discussed at length in session 10, evidence from that case (and elsewhere, by the way) revealed that older workers use fewer sick days and tend to stay with the company longer than do their younger counterparts.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Last student questions about exam 2a

Q: I am having trouble understanding the what is meant by salient stimuli.  I am confused with that slide.  Could you please explain that to me.

A: A salient stimulus is one more likely to be noticed because it contrasts with its surroundings.  A 150-pound NFL player or a 75-year-old college freshman are two instances of salience.  Sometimes the condition of the person sensing the stimulus can affect salience.  For example, you're more likely to notice a fast food place if you are hungry when you drive by it.

--------------------------------------------------
Q: On Exam 2A Version 3 from 2011, a question asks 

"4. Despite the fact that Ruth generally designs subsystems that function smoothly and as specified, she failed to do so on one recent 
project. Her supervisor might well attribute this performance to external circumstances on the basis of ____________ ."
"A. Low consensus. B. Low distinctiveness. C. High consistency. D. Low consistency. E. High consensus."

The answer is said to be "D." However, Low consistency is said to be unstable performance of a given task over time. Ruth was said that she designs functional subsystems and only on her most recent subsystem was there a problem. Wouldn't this be more related to distinctiveness, since it is in relation to her performance on a task and it has only been this one task that she has had a problem?
A: Good point, since I failed to make it clear enough that I'm using "performance" here to refer to the failed project, and not her overall performance.  This failure is inconsistent with her overall performance, and its cause would likely be attributed to external circumstances. Best...mf
-----------------------------------------------------
Q: What does it mean when something is considered to be a low-differentiation error.
 
A: The three types of low differentiation errors--mainly just using part of a rating scale when doing a formal evaluation--are defined this way in the session 15 class slides.  The actual definitions appear with other common perceptual errors in a table in chapter 2. 
-------------------------------------------------------
Q:  What does it mean when something is considered to be a low-differentiation error.
 
A: The three types of low differentiation errors--mainly just using part of a rating scale when doing a formal evaluation--are defined this way in the session 15 class slides.  The actual definitions appear with other common perceptual errors in a table in chapter 2. 

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Exam 2a student questions and other review items



 
Student questions:


Q: Personality Differences: Was that where it discusses the self esteem, self efficacy, self concept, learned helplessness, proactive personality and self mentoring.

A: Those terms are all associated with this topic.  We focused on personality traits in some detail in the first two sessions of this segment (#2).  One of these traits was high and low Machiavellianism, but there were several others.
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Q: Two Career Life Cycles: One was the tradition cycle, but I couldnt figure out what the other one was. Also what are the differences between the two. 
A: If you've reviewed the traditional and modern overlapping life cycles and considered the duration of the curves in each, you'll know most of what you need to know on this.

Q: Time Management skills and strategies: Would this include scheduling and prioritizing, I know what I understand what it is but i don't know the formal definition to them. 
A: Those terms are used according their usual dictionary definitions.  You'll also want to know something about the tools people use: to-do lists, action plans, etc.
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Q:  Are job sharing and work sharing the same thing? 

A: They are not the same thing, though many sources (including Wikipedia) conflate the two terms.
Job sharing is an employment arrangement where typically two people are retained on a part-time or reduced-time basis to perform a job normally fulfilled by one person working full-time.
Work sharing is a reduction of working time intended to spread a reduced volume of work over the same or a similar number of workers in order to avoid layoffs. There was an example of this in the session 2 online video.
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Q:  session 16: I am having some difficulty understanding this section, about the employer's rights over the employees. I am confused on what we need to know for this section. I did both the readings where it discussed some of the ways an employer can track the employee through the cameras, computer keystrokes, background checks, etc. 
A: As long as you remember the main ideas in the readings and the more prominent (even shocking) examples from the streaming video of lecture content, that will be enough.
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Q:  in the career life cycles can u explain more on the modern cycle. I understand the traditional cycle but wanted to know the major differences with the modern and traditional. 

A: My proposed modern cycle features several shorter careers instead of a single lifelong career.
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Q; the definitions of the three different types of justices and how they differ from each other. 

A: These are described in the text and along with organizational justice in the online lecture.
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Q: what exactly is the job characteristics model.

A: This job design model is depicted in the text and notes associated with session 12, and also in the related flip videos on educreations.com.

Horizontal and vertical type personalities, i am really confused on those definitions. 

Horizontal and vertical as used in this class are descriptions of loadings (motivational approaches to job design), not to personalities.

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Q: what is co-located mean, and how does that compare with virtual teams. 

A: Co-located teams are ones in which members are all at the same location—the opposite of virtual teams.


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Some Social Networking Terms..from sessions 11 and 13:
  • Interpersonal ties carry information and imply a connection
  • Strong ties, e.g., family and friends
  • Weak ties, limited time and intimacy invested
  • Absent ties, with mutual recognition but little or no information exchanged
  • Microcelebrities – narrow and transient fame, often virally Internet-based

Friday, March 29, 2013

correction to "Some exam 2a items and other information"

When I mentioned that exam 1a review materials were now available on educreations.com, I meant to type "exam 2a" review materials.  Exam 1a topics are not what you should be studying for next Thursday's exam.  best...mf

Thursday, March 28, 2013

BLACKBOARD ASSIGNMENTS #6, #7, #8, and #9

Blackboard Assignments #6, #7, #8, and #9
Due April 5 (Friday), April 11 (Thursday), April 17 (Wednesday), and April 25 (Thursday), respectively.


For your convenience as we enter this semester’s crush period, assignments #6, #7, #8, and #9 are posted together. They have different deadlines, as you can see, but you are welcome to complete them as early as possible. (Please do not do Asg09 TOO early.)
There will be no assignment #10; it is one “free point” that’s really FREE!

NOTE THAT THESE ARE DUE ON VARIOUS DAYS OF THE WEEK FOR SEVERAL REASONS, INCLUDING THE  NEED TO POSTPONE THE NEXT ASSIGNMENT UNTIL AFTER EXAM 2A..

BLACKBOARD ASSIGNMENT #6
Due on FRIDAY, 4/5

In the "student edition" of the premium content site, go to the Manager's Hot Seat section and complete Scenario #12: Virtual Workplace--Out of the Office Reply. Review the profiles, references, scenario, and dossier before you create your report evaluating how Ralph Ramos handled the situation. Be sure to include your answers to the 6 multiple choice questions in the conference scenario video itself.  (Use the email feature at the bottom of the screen to copy the text into your clipboard.)

Once you've created the report analyzing the situation in your own words, you can save it--along with the responses--to a text file to copy and paste into a Blackboard discussion entry. Please post your assignment by CREATING A THREAD with the subject heading Asg06.

BLACKBOARD ASSIGNMENT #7 (Asg07)
Due Thursday, April 11

In the "student edition" of the premium content site, go to the Manager's Hot Seat section and complete Scenario #3: Partnership: The Unbalancing Act.

Include one or more paragraphs that identify the kind conflict taking place and also classify and evaluate Rande’s approach to resolving the conflict.  What mistakes do you think she and Jonas made going into their partnership and leading up to the current situation?  Can you name any things they seem to have done right?

As in previous assignments, you must answer the questions posed during the scenario, include them in your report, and paste the resulting text file into a Blackboard discussion entry with Asg07 in the subject line. (Use the email feature at the bottom of the screen to copy the text into your clipboard.)


BLACKBOARD ASSIGNMENT #8 (Asg08)
Due on Wednesday, April 17.

In the "student edition" of the premium content site, take the Self Assessment titled “Assessing Your Ethical Decision-Making Skills.” Read the feedback and write one or two sentences reporting your score and reacting to it in any way you like.

Then go to the Manager's Hot Seat section and complete Scenario #2: Ethics: Let’s Make a Fourth Quarter Deal. Review the profiles, references, scenario, and dossier before you create your report.
Copy your answer to the in-case questions in your assignment posting, and add a paragraph evaluating Jason’s performance.



BLACKBOARD ASSIGNMENT #9 (Asg09)
Due *** THURSDAY *** April 25

Write one or more
paragraphs analyzing your experience in this course. Which topics did you find most (or least) helpful and interesting? Especially welcome are your opinions of the various tools and instructional techniques, including the text and other readings, regular and "second chance" exams, short in-class videos, downloadable review slides, the hotseat, guest speakers, clickers, flip class and exam review videos, and on-line contributions like this one. What changes might improve the course for the students who will follow you?

Some exam 2a items and other information

CLICKER QUESTIONS: The clicker questions for the second course segment are now available on electronic reserve.  Feel free to email me if you have trouble answering any questions using your notes, the slides, or the text and other readings.  ERes file name: Exam 2a Review: 09-15 clicker questions

EXAM 2A REVIEW ITEMS: As I'm sure you know, the session 16 video and the Exam 2a (not 1a, as stated earlier) review presentations can be accessed on electronic reserve and educreations.com, respectively.  I caution you against waiting till the last minute to access either resource, particularly the session video.  If too many students try to see it at once, you may experience choking delays and other contention problems.  Making such a bad choice can easily end up costing you points on next Thursday's exam.

SPECIAL OFFICE HOURS TODAY: I will remain in my office today into the afternoon.  Students whose schedules usually keep them from meeting with me should take advantage of this class-time availability.  If you need to see me after around 1:30 today, please call or email me before then.

I will see you next Tuesday....mf

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Important Exam 2a items

"Exam 2a" review slides are now available on electronic reserve, and six related video exam review tutorials--each consisting of 1-3 slides with my voice-over summary--are accessible via educreations.com.  

Files of Exam 1a-related clicker questions from sessions 9-15 should also be on ERes sometime tomorrow p.m.

I appreciate any feedback you can give me on these online exam review sessions, as this is the first semester I have tried this method to help students prepare for exams.