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Week 2: History, Values, and Ethics. San Jose State University. Week 2. OD values, assumptions, and beliefs. Foundation of OD Planned change models Action research process and an overview of the types of interventions will be introduced. Recap: What is OD?.
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Week 2:History, Values, and Ethics San Jose State University
Week 2 • OD values, assumptions, and beliefs. • Foundation of OD • Planned change models • Action research process and an overview of the types of interventions will be introduced
Recap: What is OD? • Application of behavioral science knowledge and theory to collaborative interactions, supported by top management, that engage the system in a process of planned change that closes the gap between where the organization is and where it wants or ought to be.
Recap OD Goals • Improve individuals (development), teams, and organization functioning (effectiveness) • Give members the skills and knowledge to continuously improve
How? • Diagnosis/Discovery • Implementation/Intervention • Evaluation
Components needed to Achieve Goals • Top Management Support • Shared Vision: picture of desired future • Empowerment: use talents fully • Learning: continuous interaction, continual self-examining • Problem-Solving • Collaborative Management of Culture • Teamwork: standard interventions – team building, clarification of roles and goals • Consultant-Facilitator: objectivity, neutrality, expertise on process • Action Research: client is an integral participant decision-maker
History • 1911 Taylor’s “one best way”: repetitive tasks • 1922 Weber’s “bureaucracy”: hierarchy, division of labor, impersonal rules, rigid procedures • Follet’s participative leadership • 1924 Hawthorne Studies • 1940s Lewin’s Group Dynamics
OD has 4 major stems • T-Group/Laboratory Training Group (1940s, Kurt Lewin) • Survey Feedback • Action Research • Tavistock Socioclinical Approaches (1920s, Eric Trist)/QWL (QC) • 4 management systems, called Systems 1-4T: • Exploitive Authoritative • Benevolent Authoritative • Consultative • Participant Group • Strategic Change is a recent development
OD Values & Assumptions • Humanism: respect for people; importance of the person/intrinsic worth; potential to grow • Optimism: people are good/progress is possible and desirable • Democracy: right to be free from misuse of power; justice, and equity
Implications for Dealing with… • Individuals: “Listen, support, challenge, encourage…, allow failure, remove barriers, autonomy, responsibility, high standards, reward” • Groups: “Let teams flourish,” “leaders should invest,” team leadership guides and develops; interactions toward a goal • Organizations: people make the workplace; encourage cooperation vs. competition
Applications of OD • Individual Level • Job Redesign (JDS) • Organizational Behavior Management (OBM) • Group Level • Group process interventions • Leadership training • Team Development • Organizational Level • Intergroup intervention • Changing cultures • Socio-technical system changes
Practitioners’ Value… • Effectiveness/Efficiency • Open Communication/Confrontation • Empowering/Power Equalization • Enhance Productivity • Promoting Organizational Participation • Authenticity/trust
Ethics • Promise only what you can deliver • Care • Customize service • Person selling work is person doing the work • Teach client how to engage in OD • Service first • Do not sell yourself short for fads • Can consultant deliver what client is willing to buy? • But, not replacement (i.e., no insourcing) • Training leadership isn’t necessarily a good solution
Ethics • Cannot force change • Collusion • True to the source(s) of problems • Credit changes to the client • Take on only work you can handle. • Maintain your worth • Whole system is the client
Action Research • Lewin said, ‘there’s no action action without research, no research without action.’
Action Research 1 Preliminary Diagnosis 2 Data Gathering 3 Data Feedback 7 Evaluation 4 Exploration of Data 6 Action 5 Action Planning