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BA116IU Introduction to Social Sciences Semester Autumn/1, 2008-2009

BA116IU Introduction to Social Sciences Semester Autumn/1, 2008-2009. School of Business Administration IU – VNU HCMC. Instructor : Dr. Truong Thi Kim Chuyen USSH – VNU HCMC. Chapter 6. GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS. Chapter Outline. Understanding Groups Understanding Organizations

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BA116IU Introduction to Social Sciences Semester Autumn/1, 2008-2009

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  1. BA116IUIntroduction to Social SciencesSemester Autumn/1, 2008-2009 School of Business Administration IU – VNU HCMC Instructor: Dr. Truong Thi Kim Chuyen USSH – VNU HCMC

  2. Chapter 6 GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS Chapter Outline • Understanding Groups • Understanding Organizations • The Changing Workplace • Social Policy and Organizations: The State of the Unions

  3. Understanding Groups • Group:Any number of people with similar norms, values, and expectations who interact with one another on a regular basis • Types of Groups

  4. Understanding Groups • Primary Group: small group characterized by intimate, face-to-face association and cooperation • Secondary Group: formal, impersonal groups in which there is little social intimacy or mutual understanding • Types of Groups • Primary and Secondary Groups

  5. Understanding Groups

  6. Understanding Groups • In-groups: any groups or categories to which people feel they belong • Out-groups: any groups or categories to which people feel they do not belong • Types of Groups • In-Groups and Out-Groups Conflict between in-groups and out-groups can turn violent on a personal as well as political level.

  7. Understanding Groups • 10–15 people assembled by a researcher to discuss a predetermined topic, such as a new product or a need in the community. • Developed by Robert Merton and colleagues at Columbia University • Types of Groups • Focus Groups

  8. Understanding Groups • Any group that individuals use as standard for evaluating their own behavior • Types of Groups • Reference Groups • Set and enforce standards of conduct and belief

  9. Understanding Groups • Dyad: a two-member group • Triad: a three-member group • Studying Small Groups • Small Group: group small enough for all members to interact simultaneously • Size of a Group • Smaller groups havegreater interaction opportunities Coalitions: temporary or permanent alliances geared toward common goal

  10. Understanding Organizations • Formal Organization: special-purpose group designed and structured for maximum efficiency • Formal Organizations and Bureaucracies • Characteristics of a Bureaucracy • Bureaucracy: component of formal organization that uses rules and hierarchical ranking to achieve efficiency

  11. Understanding Organizations • Hierarchy of authority • Characteristics of a Bureaucracy • Ideal Type Bureaucracy • Division of labor Alienation:condition of estrangement or dissociation from the surrounding society Trained Incapacity:workers become so specialized that they develop blind spots and fail to notice obvious problems

  12. Understanding Organizations • Characteristics of a Bureaucracy • Employment basedon technicalqualifications • Ideal Type Bureaucracy • Written Rulesand Regulations Goal Displacement: overzealous conformity to official regulations • Impersonality Peter Principle:every employee within a hierarchy tends to rise to his or her level of incompetence (Peter and Jull 1969)

  13. Understanding Organizations

  14. Understanding Organizations • Characteristics of a Bureaucracy • Bureaucratization as Process • Bureaucratization:Process by which group, organization,or social movementbecomes increasingly bureaucratic • Oligarchy: Rule bya Few Iron Law of Oligarchy: describes how even a democratic organization will eventually develop into a bureaucracy ruled by a few (called an oligarchy)

  15. Understanding Organizations • Classical Theory: also known as Scientific Management Approach); workers motivated almost entirely by economic rewards • Human Relations Approach: role of people, communication and participation within a bureaucracy emphasized • Bureaucracy and Organizational Culture

  16. Understanding Organizations • Organizations established on basis of common interest • Members volunteer or even pay to participate • “Formal organizations” and “voluntary organizations” not mutually exclusive • Voluntary Associations

  17. Understanding Organizations • Figure 6.1: Membership in Voluntary Associations in the United States

  18. The Changing Workplace • Formal organizations experimenting with new ways of getting the job done since late 20th century • Collective decisionmaking • Minimal hierarchy • Work teams • Organizational Restructuring

  19. The Changing Workplace • Employees who work full- or part-time at home rather than in an outside office • Number of telecommuters increased from 8.5 million in 1995 to 28 million in 2001 (Donald B. Davis and Polonko 2001) • Telecommuting may move society further along the continuum from Gemeinschaft to Gesellschaft • Telecommuting

  20. The Changing Workplace • E-mail efficient, rapidly communicated, and democratic • Gives an organization the benefit of experiences and views of more of its workforce • Does not convey body language • Leaves permanent record • Can be monitored • Electronic Communication

  21. Social Policy and Organizations • What diminished importance of organized labor unions? • Have unions perhaps outlived their usefulness in a rapidly changing global economy dominated by the service industry? • The State of the Unions • The Issue

  22. Social Policy and Organizations • The State of the Unions • The Setting • Labor Unions: organized workers sharing either the same skill or the same employer • The experience of unions varies widely in different countries

  23. Social Policy and Organizations • Changes in type of industry • Growth in part-time jobs • The legal system • Globalization • Employer offensive • Union rigidity and bureaucratization • The State of the Unions • The Setting • Reasons given for decline of labor unions:

  24. Social Policy and Organizations • Marxists and functionalists view unions as logical response to emergence of impersonal, large-scale, formal, and often alienating organizations • Conflict theorists point out that the longer union leaders are in office the less responsive they are to the needs and demands of the rank and file • Many union employees encounter role conflict • The State of the Unions • Sociological Insights

  25. Social Policy and Organizations • Major barrier to union growth exists in 21 states with so-called right to work laws • Debate over campaign finance reform in Congress in 2001 raised question of whether labor unions should use dues to support a particular candidate or promote a position • The State of the Unions • Policy Initiatives

  26. SUMMARY Social interaction among human beings is necessary to the transmission of culture and the survival of every society. This chapter examines the social behavior of groups, formal organizations, and voluntary associations.

  27. When we find ourselves identifying closely with a group, it is probably a primary group. A secondary group is more formal and impersonal. • People tend to see the world in terms of in-groups and out-groups, a perception often fostered by the very groups to which they belong. • Reference groups set and enforce standards of conduct and serve as a source of comparison for people’s evaluations of themselves and others. • Interactionist researcher have noted distinct and predictable processes in the functioning of small groups. The simplest group is a dyad, composed of two members. Triads and larger groups increase the ways of interacting and allow for coalitions to form.

  28. As societies have become more complex, large formal organizations have become more powerful and pervasive. • Max Weber argued that in its ideal form, every bureaucracy have five basic characteristics: division of labor, hierarchical authority, written rules and regulations, impersonality, and employment based on technical qualifications. • Bureaucracy can be understood both as a process and as a matter of degree. Thus, an organization may be more or less bureaucratic than other organizations. • When, leaders of an organization build up their power, the result can be oligarchy (rule by a few).

  29. The informal structure of an organization can undermine and redefine official bureaucratic policies. • People join voluntary associations for a variety of purposes – for example, to share in joint activities or to get help with personal problems. • Organizational restructuring and new technologies have transformed the workplace through innovations such as collective decision making and telecommuting. • Labor unions are on the decline because of major shifts in the economy.

  30. http://www.couchsurfing.org/login.html

  31. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 1. Opinion

  32. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 2. Way of Life

  33. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 3. Punctuality

  34. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 4. Contacts

  35. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 5. Anger

  36. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 5. Anger

  37. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 6. Queue when Waiting

  38. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 7. Me

  39. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 8. Sundays on the Road

  40. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 9. Party

  41. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 10. In the Restaurant

  42. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 11. Stomach Ache

  43. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 12. Traveling

  44. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 13. Definition of Beauty

  45. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 14. Handling of Problems

  46. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 15. Three Meals a Day

  47. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 16. Transportation

  48. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 18. Shower Timing

  49. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 19. Moods and Weather

  50. Eastern/Western Cultural Differences 20. The Boss

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