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PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT University of Management and Technology 1901 N. Fort Myer Drive Arlington, VA 22209 USA Phone: (703) 516-0035 Fax: (703) 516-0985 Website: www.umtweb.edu © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-1 MGT101 CHAPTER 18: Understanding People: Attitudes, Perception, and Learning Certo, S. C. Modern Management (9th Ed.) Prentice Hall © 2000 © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-2 MGT101 Learning Objectives Upon successful completion, the student will be able to: Understand employee workplace attitudes Analyze insights into how to change employee attitudes Describe an appreciation of the impact of employee perceptions on employee behaviors Explain employee perceptions of procedural justice Understand adult learners are different from younger students © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-3 MGT101 WHAT ARE ATTITUDES? Attitudes are a predisposition to react to a situation, person, or concept with a particular response. The response can be either positive or negative. Three types of attitudes: Cognitive: beliefs about a person Affective: positive or negative feeling about a particular person Behavioral: an intent to behave a certain way toward a particular person © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-4 MGT101 WHAT ARE ATTITUDES? A person’s attitude is a result of values and beliefs held by an individual. Beliefs are internalized and accepted “facts” or “truths” about an object or person that have been gained from either direct experience or a secondary source. Example so beliefs include Religious faith Political ideology Arguments about religion and politics have no place at work. Values are levels of worth placed on various factors in the environment. Beliefs, attitudes, and values interact with and guide behavior in the workplace. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-5 MGT101 WHAT ARE ATTITUDES? Situation: Based on personal attitudes, beliefs, and values, a manager decides to deny a request for new software © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu Figure 18.1 18-6 MGT101 Theory of Reasoned Action The Theory or Reasoned Action posits that behavior is a matter of choice, and the best predictor of behavior is intention to perform. Intention is predictable by knowing the following: The person’s attitude toward performing the behavior The person’s subjective norm or the expectation that the person will perform a certain behavior © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-7 MGT101 WHAT ARE ATTITUDES? Theory of reasoned action © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu Figure 18.2 18-8 MGT101 Employee Attitudes Academic research and the hands-on experience of managers have produced three relevant theories. The first focuses on the design of the job and stresses task design, work autonomy, and level of challenge. The second stresses social influence, holding that attitudes toward jobs are affected by the attitudes toward peers. The third focuses on a dispositional approach that stresses personal characteristics that are fairly stable over time. This theory holds that people are generally predisposed to like or dislike both the overall quality of their jobs and such specific job characteristics as the work itself, supervision, compensation, and work rules. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-9 MGT101 WHAT ARE ATTITUDES? Three theories of job attitudes applied to the theory of reasoned action © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu Figure 18.3 18-10 MGT101 CHANGING ATTITUDES Behaviors and attitudes can be predicted by knowing two factors: A person’s beliefs The social norms that influence a person’s intentions Managers may strive to change attitudes, intentions, and behaviors by changing Compensation Job design, and Work hours. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-11 MGT101 Human Resource Approach The human resource approach is one in which those activities that are highly valued by employees are provided by the organization to improve attitude, intentions, and behaviors. Human resource specialists have identified four major causes of behavioral problems: Lack of skills: this can be remedied through training, transfer, or termination Lack of positive attitude: find out what motivates the employee and offer it as a reward for good behavior Rule breaking: best handled with positive discipline Personal problems: troubled employees have problems may extend to emotional, financial, physical, and social issues that negatively affect work performance © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-12 MGT101 WHAT ARE ATTITUDES? Table 18.1 Basic Principles of the Human Resource Approach Providing employee training Communicating about human resource programs and policies Helping new employees learn about their job and the company Providing advancement opportunities within the company Providing job security Hiring qualified employees Having enough people to get the job done Asking my opinions about how one can improve one’s own job Asking my opinion about making the company successful Asking for employee suggestions Acting on employee suggestions © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-13 MGT101 PERCEPTION Perception and the perceptual process is a series of actions in which an individual selects stimuli, organizes data, and interprets the resulting information. Perception links the person to his/her environment. Thus, the perceptual process links the individual with his or her environment. Since we can only select and process a limited number of the stimuli, we are never aware of everything that occurs around us. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-14 MGT101 PERCEPTION Process of perception © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu Figure 18.4 18-15 MGT101 Attribution Theory Attribution is the process of trying to interpret the behavior of others by assigning to it motives or causes. But we seldom, if ever, are able to know the real motives or causes of others. Few of us know the motives and causes of our own behavior. The attribution process can be avoided by: Making the effort to see the situation as perceived by the employee Guarding against perceptual distortions Paying attention to individual differences. Managers trying to understand the causes—which can be internal, attitude, motivation, ability, lack of knowledge or external, difficulty of the task or actions of others. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-16 MGT101 PERCEPTION Researchers tend to focus on three factors of attribution: Consensus: the belief that a person's actions are consistent with those of his/her peers Consistency: the extent to which a person behaves in a similar fashion when confronted with various situations Distinctiveness: the extent to which a person behaves consistently when faced with different situations. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-17 MGT101 Perceptual Distortions Stereotypes A fixed, distorted generalization about members of a group Halo Effect Allowing one particular aspect of an employee’s behavior to influence his or her evaluation Projection Unconscious tendency to project our own traits, motives, or attitudes on others © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-18 MGT101 Perceptual Distortions Self-serving Bias and Attribution Error The identification of external causes as to the cause for one’s own performance is self-serving bias. The tendency to overestimate internal and external causes is called attribution error. Selective Perception: the practice of collecting information that supports our perceptions and minimizes emotional distress Recency: only the most recent data seems to be relevant © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-19 MGT101 Perceptions of Procedural Justice Procedural justice is the perceived fairness of the process used to decide things such as merit pay and promotions. Employees actually form separate perceptions about the organization’s process for deciding outcomes on the one hand and the consequences on the other hand. Procedural justice examines the fairness of the process itself: Are decisions made according to clear standards? Is the process used consistently for everyone? Can I appeal the decision? Will I be able to have input? Distributive justice examines only the outcome of a decision or policy: Did I receive the promotion? Did I get the raise? © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-20 MGT101 Perceptions of Procedural Justice Dispute Resolution A critical factor in this evaluation process is how managers resolve disputes. Mediation of disputes is found to be the fairest of all techniques used. Employee Responses to Perceptions of Unfairness Those with seniority usually decide that they have invested too many years in the organization either to leave or to cause a disturbance. Instead, they may respond by performing marginally until retirement. Newer employees are more likely to leave for (perceived) better opportunities elsewhere. The costs of unfair employee treatment are difficult to compute. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-21 MGT101 LEARNING Learning can be a permanent change in behavior resulting from practice, experience, education, or training. In organizations, people learn specific job-related knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs). They also learn about organizational norms: what is expected of them and how things are accomplished. Both learning situations are affected by beliefs, attitudes, and values. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-22 MGT101 LEARNING Two major classifications of learning Operant Learning—behavior that is a function of its consequences Cognitive Learning—employees choose behaviors that will enable them to achieve long-range goals. Cognitive learning is based on goal setting. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-23 MGT101 GOAL SETTING Managers use goal setting to correct problems and to achieve new objectives. Some strategies for setting goals include: Directed behavior—Goals help people focus their daily decisions and behaviors in specific ways. Challenges—Individuals are more motivated, and thus achieve higher levels of performance, when given specific objectives instead of such nondirective responses as “keep up the good work” Resource allocation—Critical decisions involving resources (people, time, equipment, money) are more consistent with organizational goals when goal-setting strategies are used. Structure—The formal and informal organizational structure can be shaped to set communication patterns and provide each position with a degree of authority and responsibility that supports employee and organizational goals. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-24 MGT101 Learning Strategies Positive Reinforcement Anything that causes a behavior to be repeated is a positive reinforcer. Common examples are praise, recognition, and pay. It is essential that the reinforcer directly follow the desired behavior. Avoidance Behavior that can prevent the onset of an undesired consequence often results from avoidance learning. Escape Strategy When a manager provides an arrangement in which a desired response will terminate an undesired consequence, that manager is using the escape strategy. Punishment Strategy When an undesired behavior by an employee is followed by an undesired response by management, a punishment strategy is being used. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-25 MGT101 Summary Attitudes are a predisposition to react to a situation, person, or concept with a particular response. The response can be either positive or negative. There are generally three types of attitudes: Cognitive—beliefs about a person Affective—a positive or negative feeling about a particular person Behavioral—an intent to behave a certain way toward a particular person © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-26 MGT101 Summary A person’s attitude is a result of values and beliefs held by that individual. Beliefs are accepted facts based on experience. Values are levels of worth placed on environmental factors. Employee’s attitudes toward their jobs are usually quite stable over time. Managers trying to change employee attitudes should try first to understand the concept of reasoned action. When behavior is a matter of choice, the best predictor of behavior is intention to perform. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-27 MGT101 Summary Intention is predictable by knowing the following: the person’s attitude toward performing the behavior or the person’s subjective norm, or the expectation that the person will perform a certain behavior. Job factors are also an important predictor of attitudes. Three theories are used to explain the primary determinant of employee attitudes: design of the job social influence dispositional approach © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-28 MGT101 Summary Managers can best predict behavior and attitudes by knowing the following: a person’s beliefs, or the social norms that influence a person’s intentions. Managers use compensation, job design, and work hours to try and change employee attitudes. Another approach to job satisfaction is the human resource approach, in which those activities that are highly valued by employees are provided by the organization. Bad attitudes are generally not the problem, but just a matter of unacceptable behavior. Attitude, although an influence in behavior, is internal and cannot be accurately measured. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-29 MGT101 Summary Since beliefs and values affecting attitudes can be complex, managers should not focus too hard on this aspect. Human resource specialists have identified four major causes of behavioral problems: lack of skills—this can be remedied through training, transfer, or termination lack of positive attitude—this can be resolved by finding out what motivates the employee and offer it as a reward for good behavior rule breaking—this is best handled with positive discipline; and personal problems—the troubled employee syndrome © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-30 MGT101 Summary Perception and the perception process is a series of actions in which an individual selects stimuli, organizes data, and interprets the resulting information. Perception links the person to his/her environment. Managers try to interpret the behavior of others through a process known as attribution. Attribution can be avoided by making the effort to see the situation as perceived by the employee, by guarding against perceptual distortions, and finally, by paying attention to individual differences. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-31 MGT101 Summary Managers try to understand the causes, which can be internal or external, of employee behavior. Researchers tend to focus on three factors of attribution: consensus consistency distinctiveness © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-32 MGT101 Summary Managers tend to make judgments based on their perceptions but must avoid the following distortions: stereotyping halo effect projection self-serving bias and attribution error selective perception recency Employees continually evaluate the fairness of a system or process through a concept known as procedural justice. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-33 MGT101 Summary A critical factor in this evaluation process is how managers resolve disputes. Mediation of disputes is found to be the fairest of all techniques used. Learning can be a permanent change in behavior through one of the following methods: operant—behavior is a function of its consequences cognitive—employees choose behaviors that will enable them to achieve long-range goals. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-34 MGT101 Summary Cognitive learning is based on goal setting. Some strategies for setting goals include: directed behavior challenges resource allocation structure Managers use goal setting to correct problems and to achieve new objectives. The primary objective of any disciplinary action is to show that undesired behavior can and will invoke penalties, and to motivate employees to comply with rules and regulations. © 2006 UMT Version 06-09-06 Visit UMT online at www.umtweb.edu 18-35 MGT101