Acronyms Chapter 2 Flashcards
Leadership Traits
EISI
- Admitting Error
- Good Interpersonal Skills
- Emotional Stability and Composure
- Intellectual Breadth
Eysenck Hierarchical Model of Personality
- Extraversion v/s Introversion
- Neuroticism v/s Emotional Stability
Model of Personality - Psychoticism – aggressive / impulsive behaviour
Big Five / Five Factor Model (FFM)
OCEAN / CANOE
- Openness to experience – curious v/s cautious
- Conscientiousness – organised v/s careless
- Extraversion – outgoing v/s reserved
- Agreeableness – friendly v/s hostile
- Neuroticism – nervous v/s stable
Kolb’s Lewinian Experiential Learning Model
COCA
- Concrete EXPERIENCES
- Observation and REFLECTION
- Formation of abstract CONCEPTS & generalizations
- ACTIVE EXPERIMENTATION – testing implications of concepts in new situations
Honey and Mumford’s LSQ – Learning Styles Questionnaire
PART
- Pragmatists – learn by putting what they have learnt into practice
- Activists – learn by doing
- Reflectors – learn by observing and reflecting on what happened
- Theorists – learn by understanding the theory, models and concepts behind the actions
Knowledge at Workplace
KSA
- KNOWLEDGE
- SKILLS
- ABILITIES / ATTITUDES
Garavan’s Multi-Level Model of SHRD – Strategic Human Resource Development
VICE
- Job VALUE and Uniqueness – the importance with which the organisation views particular jobs
- INTERNAL Context – interaction with internal / organizational environment
- CONTEXT – interaction between L&D and external (STEEPLE) environment
- Professional EXPECTATIONS – individual’s expectations of how their talent will be used
Bushe and Marshak’s OD – Organisational Development
PC MOLDER
- Consultants are PART of the PROCESS, not apart from the process
- Creating CHANGE requires CHANGING CONVERSATIONS
- Organisations are MEANING-MAKING systems
- Groups and organizations are inherently self-ORGANIZING
- LANGUAGE matters
- Increase DIFFERENTIATION between participative inquiry and engagement before seeking coherence
- Transformational Change is more EMERGENT than planned
- REALITY and RELATIONSHIPS are socially constructed
Cooperrider and Srivastava’s Appreciative Inquiry (AI) 4-D Model
4D
- Discovery – the best of what is
- Dream – what could be
- Design – what should be
- Destiny – what will be
Frustration-induced Behaviours
FRAW
- Fixation
- Regression
- Aggression
- Withdrawal
Factors influencing an individual’s response to Frustration
PP BAM
- Level of POTENCY of need
- PERSONALITY characteristics
- Perceived nature of BLOCKING agent
- Degree of ATTACHMENT to the goal
- Strength of MOTIVATION
McClelland’s 3 Themes of Motivation using TAT – Thematic Apperception Test
AAP
- nAch – need for ACHIEVEMENT
- nAff – need for AFFILIATION
- nPow – need for POWER and CONTROL OVER OTHERS
Alderfer’s Theory based on Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
ERG
- EXISTENCE Needs – safety, physiological, survival needs (most concrete and easily verifiable)
- RELATEDNESS Needs – social, esteem, affiliation needs (less concrete as dependent on relationships)
- GROWTH Needs – self-esteem and self-actualization needs (least concrete and unique to each individual)
Herzberg’s Two Factor Hygiene Theory
HM
- Hygiene Factors (linked to dissatisfaction) – working conditions, interpersonal relationships, supervision, company and policy administration, job security, salary
- Motivators (linked to increased motivation) – achievement, recognition, the work itself, responsibility, advancement
Vroom’s Expectancy Theory
VIVE
- Valence – individual’s preference for attaining (or not) a particular outcome
- Instrumentality – an individual’s perception as to whether an interim outcome will lead to the achievement of a more important outcome
- Value – the satisfaction that an outcome provides to the individual
a. First Level – performance-related, i.e. performing well for its own sake
b. Second Level – need-related, i.e. performing for the reward - Expectancy – individual’s certainty that a particular outcome will result from a particular action