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Attitudes, Self-Concept, Values, and Ethics

3. Attitudes, Self-Concept, Values, and Ethics. Introduction. Job satisfaction is based on attitudes , which in turn are shaped by values and ethics Self-concept is one’s attitude about oneself

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Attitudes, Self-Concept, Values, and Ethics

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  1. 3 Attitudes, Self-Concept,Values, and Ethics

  2. Introduction • Job satisfaction is based on attitudes, which in turn are shaped by values and ethics • Self-concept is one’s attitude about oneself • Values do tend to influence, not necessarily affect, behavior, including whether or not behavior is ethical

  3. Attitude • Attitude – a strong belief or feeling toward people, things, and situations • They are not quick judgments we change easily but we can change our attitudes • People interpret our attitudes by our behavior • Employers place great emphasis on attitude • Employee attitudes affect customer attitudes • Attitudes are primarily developed through experiences

  4. Management Attitudes • Pygmalion Effect • Supervisors’ attitudes and expectations of employees and how they treat them largely determine their performance Theory X and Theory Y • Theory X – the attitude that employees dislike work and must be closely supervised to get them to do their work • Theory Y – the attitude that employees like to work and do not need to be closely supervised to get them to do their work

  5. Changing Your Attitudes • Be aware of your attitudes • Do not harbor negative thoughts • Keep an open mind

  6. Shaping and Changing Employee Attitudes Changing Your Attitudes Do not harbor negative thoughts Be aware of Your attitudes Keep an open mind Shaping and Changing Employee Attitudes Be a positive role model Accentuate positive conditions Give employees feedback Provide consequences

  7. Job Satisfaction • Job satisfaction – a set of attitudes toward work • It is what most employees want from their jobs • Job satisfaction affects absenteeism and turnover, which affect performance • Job satisfaction survey – process of determining employee attitudes about the job and work environment

  8. Improving job satisfaction may lead to better human relations and organizational performance by creating a win-win situation.

  9. 1. The work itself 3. Growth and upward mobility 2. Pay 6. Attitude toward work 5. Coworkers 4. Supervision Determinants of Job Satisfaction

  10. Self-Concept • Self-concept – your overall attitude about yourself • Also called: • Self-esteem • Self-image • Self-concept includes perceptions about several aspects of oneself • Having a positive self-concept is part of emotional intelligence

  11. Self-Efficacy • Self-efficacy – your belief in your capability to perform in a specific situation • Self-efficacy affects your- • effort • persistence • expressed interest • the difficulty of goals you select

  12. Self-Fulfilling Prophecy • Your expectations affect your performance • Self-fulfilling prophecy – occurs when your expectations affect your success or failure • If you think you will be successful, you will be • If you think you will fail, you will, because you will fulfill your expectations • Your self-efficacy becomes your self-fulfilling prophecy

  13. Attribution Theory • Attribution – the perception of the cause of behavior as being internal or external • Internal behavior – is within the control of the person • External behavior – is out of the person’s control • We make judgments about why people do the things they do by using: distinctiveness, consistency, and consensus • Attribution theory is how we perceive the causes of behavior, which in turn affect our subsequent choices and behaviors.

  14. General Guidelines to Improve Your Self-Concept • View mistakes as learning experiences • Accept failure and bounce back • Control negative behavior and thoughts • Use any religious or spiritual beliefs you have that can help you develop a more positive self-concept

  15. Action Plan for Building a Positive Self-Concept • Step 1.Identify your strengths and areas that need improvement • Step 2.Set short and long term goals and visualize them • Step 3.Develop a plan and implement it

  16. Values (1 of 2) • Values – are the things that have worth for or are important to the individual • Concern what “should be” • Influence the choices we make among alternative behaviors • Value system – the set of standards by which an individual lives

  17. Values (2 of 2) • Values direct the form that motivated behavior will take • Values help shape your attitudes • Values are developed in much the same way as attitudes • Values are more stable than attitudes

  18. Spirituality (1 of 2) • One’s spirituality is the essence of who he or she is • It defines the inner self- • separate from the body • including the physical and intellectual self • The quality of being spiritual, of recognizing the intangible, life-affirming force in self and all human beings

  19. Spirituality (2 of 2) • It is a state of intimate relationship with the inner self of higher values and morality • It is a recognition of the truth of the inner nature of people • It does not apply to particular religions, although the values of some religions may be part of a person’s spiritual focus

  20. Spirituality in the Workplace (1 of 2) • It is about people seeing their work: • as a spiritual path • as an opportunity to grow personally • as a way to contribute to society in a meaningful way • It is about learning to be more caring and compassionate with: • fellow employees • bosses • subordinates • customers

  21. Spirituality in the Workplace (2 of 2) • It is about integrity • being true to oneself • telling the truth to others • Can refer to an individual’s attempts to live his or her values more fully in the workplace • Can refer to the ways organizations structure themselves to support the spiritual growth of employees

  22. Guidelines for Leading from a Spiritual Perspective • Know thyself • Act with authenticity and congruency • Respect and honor the beliefs of others • Be as trusting as you can be • Maintain a spiritual practice

  23. Ethics • Ethics – the moral standard of right and wrong behavior • Ethical behavior is affected by: • Personality traits and attitudes • Moral development • The situation

  24. Levels of Moral Development

  25. Moral justification is the process of reinterpreting immoral behavior in terms of a higher purpose.

  26. Justifications for Unethical Behavior (1 of 2) • Displacement of responsibility • The process of blaming one’s unethical behavior on others • Diffusion of responsibility • The process of the group using the unethical behavior with no one person being held responsible • Advantageous comparison • The process of comparing oneself to others who are worst

  27. Justifications for Unethical Behavior (2 of 2) • Disregard or distortion of consequences • The process of minimizing the harm caused by the unethical behavior • Attribution of blame • The process of claiming the unethical behavior was caused by someone else’s behavior • Euphemistic labeling • The process of using “cosmetic” words to make the behavior sound acceptable

  28. Human Relations Guides to Ethical Decisions • When making decisions, try to meet the goal of human relations by creating a win-win situation for all stakeholders

  29. Global Ethics • Different countries have different levels of ethical standards • Managers typically have two choices: • Universalism – make the same ethical decisions across countries • Relativism –decisions to be made based on the ethical standard of the country • MNCs can choose their level of global corporate social responsibility (GCSR)

  30. Levels of Global Corporate Social Responsibility (GCSR) and Action

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