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Final Report in Pa 211

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Republic of the Philippines

CAPIZ STATE UNIVERSITY


Pontevedra, Capiz
PA 211
(Theories and Practices of Public Administration)
FRANK ANTHONY B. MAGSUCANG
MM Student

DR. EVELYN B. BORGONIA


Subject Professor

ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
Organizational behavior is the study and application of knowledge about how people as individuals
and as groups act and behave within the organizations.
GOALS OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
1. To describe systematically how people behave as they interact with one another
2. To understand why people behave in varied manners.
3. To predict future employee behavior so that an appropriate behavior so that an appropriate course of
action may be employed.
4. To control and develop human activity at work.
THE FOUR FORCES AFFECTING ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
1. People. People make up the internal social system of the organization. People are the thinking, living,
and feeling being who interact as they work in an to achieve their objectives.
2. Environment. All organizations operate with an internal and an external environment. A single
organization does not exist alone. It is a part of bigger system that contains many other related
components, such as government, military, school, family and other organizations.
3. Technology. The use of technology has a tremendous influence on working relationship. It provides the
resources with which people work and affects the tasks they perform. The great benefit is that it allows
workers to perform mush better work.
4. Structure. The structure fundamentally defines the formal relationships and use of human resources in
an organization.

DIFFERENT MODELS OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR

Basis of Model
Managerial
Orientation
Employee
Orientation
Employee
psychological
results
Employee needs
met
Performance
results

Supportive

Collegial

Custodial
Economic
Resources

Autocratic

Leadership

Partnership

Support

Team Work

Money

Authority

Job Performance

Responsive
behavior

Security &
benefits

Obedience

Participation

Self-discipline

Dependence on
organization

Dependence on
boss

Status and
recognition

Self-actualization

Security

Subsistence

Awakened drives

Moderate
enthusiasm

Passive
cooperation

Minimum

Power

CHARACTERISTIC OF A HEALTHY ORGANIZATION


1. Objectives are widely shared by the members and there is a strong and consistent flow of energy toward
those objectives.
2. People feel free to signal their awareness of difficulties because they expect the problems to dealt with
they are optimistic that these problems can be solved.
3. Problems-solving is highly pragmatic. In attacking problems, people work informally and are not
preoccupied with status, territory, or second guessing what higher management will think. A great deal
of non-conforming behavior is tolerated.
4. The judgment of people lower down in the organization is respected.
5. Collaboration is freely entered into. People readily request the help of others and are willing to give in
turn. Ways of helping one another are highly developed. Individuals and groups compete with one
another, but they do so fairly and in the direction of a shared goal.
6. When there is a crisis, the people quickly band together in work until the crisis departs
7. Conflicts are considered important to decision-making and personal growth.
8. There is a great deal of on-the-job learning based on a willingness to give, seek, and use feedback and
advice.
9. Joint critique of progress is routine.
10. Relationship are honest. People do care about one another do not feel alone.
11. People are turned on and highly involved by choice. They are optimistic. The work place is important
and fun (why not?).
12. Leadership is flexible, shifting in style and person to suit the situation.
13. There is high degree of trust among people and a sense of freedom and mutual responsibility. People
generally know what is important to the organization and what isnt.
14. Risk is accepted as a condition of growth and change.
15. What can we learn from each mistake?
16. Poor performance is confronted, and a joint resolution sought.
17. Organizational structure, procedures, and policies are fashioned to help people get the job done and to
protect the long-term health of the organization, not to give each bureaucrat his due. These procedures
are also readily changed.
18. There is a sense of order, and yet a high rate of innovation. Old methods are questioned and often give
way to new ones.
CHARACTERISTICS OF AN UNHEALTHY ORGANIZATION
1. Little personnel investment in organizational objectives, except a top levels.
2. People in the organization see things going wrong and do nothing about it.
3. People at the top try to control as many decisions as possible. They become bottlenecks, and make
decisions with inadequate information and advice. People complain about managers irrational
decisions.
4. Managers feel alone in trying to get things done. Somehow, orders, policies and procedures do not get
carried out, as intended.
5. The judgment of people lower down in the organization is not respected outside the narrow limits of
their jobs.
6. Personal needs and feelings are side issues.
7. People compete when they to collaborate.
8. When there is a crisis, people withdraw or start blaming one another.

9. Conflict is mostly covert and managed by office politics and other games, or there are interminable and
irreconcilable arguments.
10. Learning is difficult. People dont approach their peers to learn from them, but have to learn from their
own mistakes; they reflect the experience of others.
11. Feedback is avoided.
12. Relationships are contaminated by marksmanship and image-building. People feel alone and lack
concern for one another. There is an undercurrent of fear.
13. People feel locked into their jobs. They fell stale and bored but constrained by the need for security.
Their behavior, for example, in staff meetings, is listless and docile, it is not much fun. They get their
kicks elsewhere.
14. The manager is prescribing father to the organization.
15. The manager allows little freedom.
16. Minimizing risks has a very high value.

PLANNING
According to George A. Steiner, planning is a process which begins with objectives, and defines
strategies, policies and detailed plans to achieve them.
The essential nature of planning comprises four major features: (1) its contribution to purpose and
objectives, (2) its primacy among the managers tasks, (3) its pervasiveness, and (4) the efficiency of resulting
plans.
STEPS IN THE PLANNING PROCESS
According to Kinard, 1988, the following are the planning process.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

Define planning premises.


Formulate company objectives and develop strategic plans.
Develop policies.
Develop implementation plans.
Develop controls.
Organize for implementation.
Review.
According to Zulueta et. al., 1999, a comprehensive planning process involves the following steps:

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

Be aware of opportunities.
Establish objectives.
Develop premises.
Determine alternatives.
Evaluate alternatives courses of action.
Select a course of action.
Implement the plan.
Evaluate.
James Stoner described the planning process as:

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Select the goals


Analyze the environment.
Establish measurable goals.
Let sub-units develop their own respective plans.
Compare the lower-level plan with the strategic plans.

6. Close the gap.


7. Implement the strategic plan.
BENEFITS OF PLANNING
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

Planning facilitates professional growth.


Plans provide the framework for the organization.
Plans aid in delegating authority.
Plans help motivate people.
Planning aids communication flow.
Planning helps shape the future.
Plans help monitor work.
Planning builds confidence.

CHARACTERISTICS OF A GOOD PLAN


1. Objectivity. It should be factual, logical and realistic. It also be directed to achieving organizational
goals rather than personal objectives.
2. Futurity. It must foresee with reasonable accuracy the nature of the future events affecting the
industry and the organization.
3. Flexibility. They must adjust and quickly to changing conditions without seriously losing their
effectiveness.
4. Stability. It should not be changed materially from day to day.
5. Comprehensive. It should cover everything required of people, but not in such detail that it inhibits
initiative.
6. Simple. A simple plan seeks to attain its objective with the fewest components, forces, effects, and
relationship.
CLASSIFICATION OF PLANS
According to Kinard, 1988, plans may be classified on three bases: duration, specificity and
organizational level.
DURATION
1. Short-range plans. Those cover a period of one year or less.
2. Medium-range plans. Those plans last for one year to five years.
3. Long-range plans. Those plans are in effect for five years or more.
SPECIFICITY OF PLANS
1. Single-use plans are predetermined courses of action developed for unique, nonrecurring situation.
2. Standing plans are predetermined courses of action developed for repetitive situations.
Various types of Single-use and Standing Plans
1. Budget. A budget is a single-use plan that commits resources to an activity over a given period.
2. Objective. An objective, or goal, is the end toward which business activity is directed and it is a singleuse plan.
3. Policy. A policy is a general guideline that channels the decision making of subordinates. It is a standing
plan.
4. Procedure. A procedure is a standing plan that establishes a specific method for handling activities.
5. Program. A program is a composite of policies, procedures, rules, and task assignments necessary to
carry out capital and operating budgets. In general, it is a standing plan.

6. Rule. A rule is a simplest type of standing plan. It dictates action that must or must not be taken in a
given situation.
7. Schedule. A schedule is single-use plan that commits resources (worker-hours and machine hours) to
given activity.
8. Strategy. A strategy is a single-use plan formulated I contemplation of actions that competitors may
undertake.
ORGANIZATIONAL LEVEL OF PLANS
1. Strategic Planning/ Top Management Planning. It includes the development of overall company
objectives, taking into consideration external environmental factors that affect operations on a longterm basis.
2. Administrative or Operational Planning/ Middle management/ major functional units. It is the
process that structures a firms resources to achieve maximum performance. They concentrate on
product market aims, selection of geographic areas, and policies dealing with the major functions of
the organization(production, marketing, finance, research personnel, etc.)
3. Tactical or Technical Planning/ Lower level/ supervisory management. This is concerned with the
efficient, day-to-day use of resources allocated to a department managers area of responsibility.

References:
Zulueta, F. M., De Lara, G. M. C., Nebres, A. M. 1999. Management Theories and Practices. Academic Publishing
Corporation.
Kinnard, J. 1988. Management. D. C. Health and Company

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