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Introduction to Industrial Psychology – Definitions & Scope. Major influences on industrial Psychology- Scientific management and human relations schools, Hawthorne Experiments Individual in Workplace Motivation and Job satisfaction , stress management. Organizational culture, Leadership & group dynamics. Work Environment & Engineering Psychology-fatigue. Boredom, accidents and safety. Job Analysis, Recruitment and Selection – Reliability & Validity of recruitment tests. Performance Management : Training & Development Miner J.B. (1992) Industrial/Organizational Psychology. N Y : McGraw Hill. Blum & Naylor (1982) Industrial Psychology. Its Theoretical & Social Foundations CBS Publication. Aamodt, M.G. (2007) Industrial/Organizational Psychology : An Applied Approach (5th edition) Wadsworth/Thompson : Belmont, C.A. Aswathappa K. (2008). Human Resource Management (fifth edition) New Delhi : Tata McGraw Hill. Psychology is the science of human mind or, In other words, it is the study of human behaviour. The application of the knowledge of psychology to the industrial situations is known as industrial psychology. Industrial psychology is the study of people at work in industry and in business. It is the study of their aptitudes and their qualifications for jobs. Individual difference: Individuals differ in physical characteristics, Intelligence, aptitudes, attitudes, personality, skills etc. Causation of Human Behaviour: Human behaviour is caused An individual does not just behave in one way or other. It is the situation which stimulates him to behave in a particular manner. It is necessary to understand cause of behaviour before making an attempt to improve upon it The aim of industrial psychology is to give the worker greater physical and mental ease at work. i. To investigate in an unbiased manner the ways in which psychological problems are handled at present. ii. To develop new methods and to modify the methods which have been tried out and evaluated. iii. To formulate certain principles which will help in the solution of human relation problems. Selection and testing Performance evaluation Job analysis and evaluation Training Leadership Motivation Job satisfaction Confliction management Diagnose and develop remedies for organisation Downsizing Organizational culture change Focus on people in man machine environment Creation of work environment compatible Career counseling Industrial relation i. Employment Testing: Modern industrial concerns use many psychological tests like intelligence test, aptitude test, interest test, personality test These tests help in choosing right types of people for organization. It the test are properly applied, there will be lower rate of labor turnover, higher productivity of employee and higher job satisfaction. Psychologists help in determining the training needs of employees, And designing the training programmes which can deliver good results The important techniques used in industry include teaching machine, programmed learning, sensitivity training, role playing etc. Job factors like education, training, experience, degree of supervision, degree of risk, etc are considered to evaluate different jobs and determine their relative worth It helps to replace the traditional casual approach to PA by systematic techniques of performance appraisal. The results of PA helps for certain important personnel decisions like promotion, training, counselling, etc. vi) Motivation of personnel vii)Vocational Guidance and counselling viii)Improvement of morale ix)Human engineering-an applied science that coordinates the design of devices, systems, and physical working conditions with the capacities and requirements of the worker Hugo Munsterberg. “Scientific Management is the substitution of exact scientific investigations and knowledge for the old individual judgment or opinion in all matters relating to the work done in the shop.” F. W. Taylor Scientific Management is nothing but a systematic analysis and breakdown of work into its smallest mechanical elements and rearranging them into their most efficient combination. To improve efficiency and speed taylor advocated Scientific Management. Science not rule of thumb Harmony, not Discord Co-operation, Not Individualism Maximum Output, Not Restricted Output Development of workers to their greatest efficiency and prosperity Equal division of responsibility Scientific task-setting Work study a) Methods study b) Motion study c)Time study d) Fatigue study Separation of Planning from doing Standardization Selection and training Differential piece rate plan Between 1927-32 George Elton Mayo Western Electric Company 1) Illumination Experiments 2) Relay Assembly Test Room Experiments 3) Bank Wiring observation room study 4) Mass Interview Programme An organization is a psycho-social system. Human factor is most important element in the social system. The behavior of an individual is dominated by the informed group of which he is a member. Workers are not merely rational economic being motivated simply by money Social and psychological factors exercise a greater influence on employee behavior and performance than physical conditions of work. Workers act or react not as individual but as a member of group. Workers respond to the total work situation J0b satisfacti0n :It is fav0urabIe and unfavurabIeness with which empI0yee view the w0rk ACHIEVEMENT REC0GNITI0N W0RK RESP0NSIBITY GENDER N0 0F DEPENDENT TIME SPEND IN J0B INTEIIiGENCE EDUCATI0N Ge0graphicaI SIZE I0catin 0F PIANT SaIary J0b security Supervis0rs and sub0rdinates 8/10/2013 30 Father of Human Relations Approach The experiments were conducted in four phase: 1. Illumination experiments 2. Relay assembly test room experiments 3. Interview phase 4. Bank wiring observation room experiments 8/10/2013 31 he first, a sequence of illumination tests from 1924 to 1927, set out to determine the effects of lighting on worker efficiency in three separate manufacturing departments. Accounts of the study revealed no significant correlation between productivity and light levels. The results prompted researchers to investigate other factors affecting worker output. 8/10/2013 32 In the first series two groups were made. One group was exposed to varying intensities of illumination. Since this group was subjected to experimental changes, it was termed as experimental group. Another group was called control group, continued to work under constant intensities of illumination. 8/10/2013 33 The researchers found that as they increased the illumination in the experimental group, both groups increased production. When the intensity is decreased, the production continued to increase in both the groups. The production decreased when the illumination was below the level of moon light. 8/10/2013 34 This phase aimed at knowing not only the impact of illumination on production but also other factors like length of the working day, rest hours, and other physical conditions In this experiment, a small homogeneous work-group of six girls was constituted. These girls were friendly to each other and were asked to work in a very informal atmosphere under the supervision of a researcher. 8/10/2013 35 The incentive scheme was changed so that each girls extra pay was based on the other five rather than output of larger group, say 100 workers or so. The productivity increased as compared to before. Two five minutes rests- one in morning session and other in evening session-were introduced which were increased to 10 minutes. The productivity increased 8/10/2013 36 The rest period was reduced to 5 minutes but frequency was increased. The productivity decreased slightly and the girls complained that frequent rest intervals affected the rhythm of the work. The number of rest was reduced to two of 10 minutes each, but in the morning, coffee or soup was served along with sandwich and in the evening, snacks was provided. The productivity increased. 8/10/2013 37 Changes in the working hours and workdays were introduced such as cutting an hour off the end of the day and eliminating Saturday work. the girls were allowed to leave at 4.30 pm instead of usual 5.00 pm and later at 4.00pm. Productivity increased. 8/10/2013 38 As each change was introduced, absenteeism decreased, morale increased and less supervision was required. Sense of belongingness ,self- discipline, sincerity increases. 8/10/2013 39 21000 people were interviewed between 1928-1930 To determine employee attitude towards the company and their jobs. 21,000 employees were interviewed over a period of three years to find out reasons for increased productivity. It was concluded that productivity can be increased if workers are allowed to talk freely about matters that are important to them 40 8/10/2013 Initially, a direct approach was used whereby interviews asked questions considered important by managers and researchers. The researchers observed that the replies of the workmen were guarded. Therefore, this approach was replaced by an indirect technique, where the interviewer simply listened to what the workmen had to say. The findings confirmed the importance of social factors at work in the total work environment. 8/10/2013 41 Conducted during 1931- 1932 It was undertaken by researchers to test some of the ideas they had gathered during the interviews. A group of 14 male workers in the bank wiring room were placed under observation for six months. A worker's pay depended on the performance of the group as a whole. The researchers thought that the efficient workers would put pressure on the less efficient workers to complete the work. However, it was found that the group established its own standards of output, and social pressure was used to achieve the standards of output. 8/10/2013 42 The hypothesis was that in order to earn more workers would produce more and in order to take advantages of group bonus, they would help each other to produce more. But this reason failed as workers decided the target for themselves which was lower than the companies target. Ex- group target for a day was connecting 6600 terminals against 7300 terminals set by the company. The worker gave following reasons for the restricted output. 8/10/2013 43 Fear of unemployment: the basic reasoning of workers was that if there would be more production per head, some if the workers would be put out of employment . Fear of raising the standards: most workers were convinced that once they had reached the standard rate of production, management would raise the standard of production reasoning that it must be easy to attain. Protection of slower workers: The workers were friendly on the job as well as off the job. They appreciated the fact that they had family responsibility that required them to remain in the job. Since slower workers were likely to be retrenched, the faster workers protected them by not overproducing. Satisfaction on the part of management: According to workers, management seemed to accept the lower production rate as no one was being fired. 8/10/2013 44 Definition of motivation: * The driving force within individuals by which they attempt to achieve some goal in order to fulfill some needs or expectation. Motivation is… Complex Psychological Physical Unique to each and every person Context sensitive Not fully understood Qualities of Motivation: Energizes behavior Directs behavior Enable persistence towards a goal Exists in varying details ENERGY DIRECTION PERSISTENCE It is a process by which a person’s efforts are energized, directed and sustained towards attaining the goal. *Energy- A measure of intensity or drive. *Direction- Towards organizational goal. *Persistence- Exerting effort to achieve goal Needs or expectations Result in Drive force (Behavior or Action) To Achieve Desired Goals Feedback fulfillments Which Provides Unsatisfied need Tension Drivers Search behaviour An unsatisfied need creates tension that stimulates the drive within an individual to generate a search behaviour to fins particular goals, if attained, will satisfy the need and reduce the tension (Robbins and Decenzo, 2004 p.280). Satisfied need Reduction of the tension A need is and internal state that makes certain outcomes attractive. Motivation •Maslow’s hierarchy of needs •Herzberg’s Two-factor theory •McClelland’s Acquire needs theory THE0RY X AND THE0RY Y BY MCGREG0R Selfactualization Esteem • Achieving one’s potential, selffulfilment, becoming what one is capable of becoming. • The desire for a positive selfimage, to achieve attention, recognition, and appreciation from others. Social • A need to be accepted by peers, friendship, being part of a group. Safety • A need for safe and secure fro physical and emotional environment, free from threat. Physiological • Food, drink, shelter, Lower-end needs are the priority needs, which must be satisfied before higher-order need are activated. Needs are satisfied in sequence. When a need is satisfied, it declines in importance and the next need becomes dominant. To motivate an individual one must know where that person is in the hierarchy and focus on satisfying at or above that level. Not everyone is motivated in the same way. Motivation and need satisfaction are anticipatory in nature. Managers must seek to guide and direct employee behaviour to meet the organizational needs and individual needs simultaneously. Hygiene Factors Working conditions Pay and security Company policies Supervisors Interpersonal relationships Motivators Achievement Recognition Responsibility Work itself Personal growth Satisfaction No satisfaction Motivation factors Hygiene factors No dissatisfaction dissatisfaction Hygiene factors involve the presence or absence of job dissatisfiers. When the hygiene factors are present, the individual is not dissatisfied; however when they are absent the individual is dissatisfied. In any case hygiene factors do not motivate. Motivators are factors that influence satisfaction and consequently motivate the person from within as he or she achieve the higher-level needs of achievement, recognition, and personal growth. Providing the hygiene factors will eliminate employee dissatisfaction but will not motivate workers to high levels of achievement. Recognition, responsibility, and the opportunity to achieve personal growth will promote satisfaction and employee performance. The benefit of this theory has implications for the effect of company systems and job design (how work is arranged and how much employees control their work) on employee The basis of the model is that needs are acquired or learned from the life experiences in the culture in which we live (Lewis et at, 2007 p 381). The acquire needs model focuses on three important needs in the work environment: 1. 2. 3. Need foe achievement (n-ach) Need for power (n-pow) Need for affiliation (n-affil n-ach – the drive to excel, to accomplish, and to achieve a standard of excellence. n-pow – the need to influence and control one’s environment; may involve either personal power or institutional power. n-affil – the need for friendly and close interpersonal relationships Acquired-need model provides managers with the understanding of the underlying needs that motivate people to behave in certain ways. This model does not explain why people choose a particular way of behaviour.