Paper. For this semester’s paper assignment, you must read one of the following “popular management” books. Then write a 7-11 page typed report (1.5 or double-spaced, 1-inch margins) relating the book to the course (note that you may have to ‘read ahead’ a bit in your textbook to see how some books relate to course topics that come after the due date for the paper). These books are NOT on reserve but may be available at a local library and/or may be available for purchase at a bookstore. Your paper is due as both hard copy and via e-mail at the beginning of class on Wednesday, November 16th at the beginning of class. The paper constitutes 11% of your course grade. You may organize your paper in one of two ways (don’t feel you have to cover every topic mentioned in the book in your report; after all, you only have 6-8 pages): Approach #1: (a) summary followed by (b) analysis, considering the same topics within each section; include a brief overview and conclusion. Either approach is fine. However, the summary should only be about 1/3rd of the book. The other 2/3rds should be analyzing the book. Is it consistent with the textbook? Is it consistent with scientific research? (It helps if you read and cite scientific studies). Is the book just repackaged ‘common sense’? Is it too simplistic? Piercing and keen insights? Unworkable models? Muddy thinking? Worthwhile advice? Remember: Reading and taking notes on your chosen book is the easy (and smaller) part of the assignment. The harder part is writing a paper relating the book to the scientific literature in Organizational Behavior, which will require additional research, thought, and organization. Amigoni, Michael, & Gurvis, Sandra (2009). Managing the Telecommuting Employee. Adams. 336 pp. Anderson, Dave (2011). How to run your business ‘by the book’. Wiley. 252 pages. Anderson, Donald L. (2009). Organizational development: The process of leading organizational change. Sage. Barsh, Joanna, & Cranston, Susie. (2009). How remarkable women lead… Crown Business. 368 pp. Blair, R. (2011). Nothing to lose, everything to gain. Portfolio. 240 pages. Bryant, Adam (2011). The corner office: Indispensable…lessons from CEOs… NY: Times Books. 272 pp. Buchanan, Mike (2011). The glass ceiling delusion. LPS publishing. 312 pp. A different perspective... Cardone, Michael, Jr. & Spurler, M. (2009). Business with soul: Creating a workplace rich in faith and values. Nashville: Thomas Nelson. 240 pages. Cloke, K., & Goldsmith, J. (2011). Resolving conflict at work, third ed. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. 399 pp.#p#分页标题#e# Conner, R., & Smith, T. (2011). Change the [organizational] culture, change the game. Portfolio, 245 pp. Demars, Nan (2011). You’ve got to be kidding! How to keep your job without losing your integrity. Fuller, Ed. (2011). You can’t lead with your feet on the desk. Wiley: 208 pp. [Focus on hospitality industry.] Furnham, Adrian (2011). Managing people in a downturn. Palgrave Macmillan. 224 pages. The title is part-economics, part-pun in that some of the problems describe people spiraling downward out of control. Gelsinger, Pat (2008). The Juggling Act: Bringing Balance to Your Faith, Family, and Work. Nashville: David Cook Publishers. 256 pp. Memoirs of a Silicon Valley executive. Goldman, Alan (2009). Transforming Toxic Leaders. Stanford, CA: Stanford Business Books. Goldstein, Jeffrey, Hazy, James K., & Lichtenstein, Ben B. (2010). Complexity and the nexus of leadership. Leveraging nonlinear science to create innovation. Palgrave MacMillan. 224 pp. ‘Chaos/complexity theory’ from the natural sciences applied (at least as a metaphor) to management. Hill, Alexander (2008). Just business. Downers Grove, IL: IVP. 256 pages. Hesselbein, Frances & Goldsmith, Marshall (Eds., 2009). The Organization of the Future 2: Visions, Strategies, & Insights on Managing in a New Era. Wiley. Twenty-six authors offer ideas. Koller, F. (2011). Spark: How old-fashioned values drive a 21st Century corporation [Lincoln Electric]. Langer, Arthur M. (2010). Information Technology and Organizational Learning: Managing Behavioral Change through Technology and Education, Second Edition. CRC Press. Latting, Jean K., & Ramsey, V. J. (2009). Reframing Change: How to Deal with Workplace Dynamics, Influence Others, and Bring People Together to Initiate Positive Change. NY: Praeger. 226 pages. The title “says it all”…but you still need to read the book for the details. Lencioni, Patrick (2004). Death by Meeting: A leadership fable. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. OK, so it probably hasn’t won any awards yet as “great literature.” Does it makes some good points? 260 pages. Littman, Jon (2009). I hate people! Kick loose from the overbearing…jerks at work… Little, Brown, 272 pp. Loehr, A., & Kaye, J. (2011). Managing the unmanageable: How to motivate... Career Press. 256 pages. Lowe, Graham (2011). Creating healthy organizations. University of Toronto Press. 256 pages. Lutz, Bob (2011). Car guys vs. bean counters. Portfolio/Penguin. 256 pp. Who should lead auto makers? Maney, K., Hamm, S., & O’Brien, J. (2011). Making the world better: The ideas that shaped a century – and a company [IBM]. IBM Press. 350 pages.#p#分页标题#e# Meig, H. (2001). The social psychology of expertise. Psychology Press. 224 pp. Mintzberg, Henry (2009). Managing. Berrett-Koehler. Reflections on management and leadership from a scholar who is able to bridge theory and practice. Based on interviews with managers. Nadler, Reldan S. (2010). Leading with emotional intelligence. McGraw-Hill. 336 pages. Oakes, K., & Galagan, P. (Eds., 2011). The executive guide to integrated talent management. ASTD. Overbeck, Jennifer, Mannix, E., & Neale, M. (2011). Negotiation and groups. Emerald. 259 pages. Pollard, C. William (2006). Serving Two Masters? HarperCollins. An executive at ServiceMaster for 25 years reflects on managerial and business success as well as “the meaning of life.” Reactions? Reiman, T. (2008). The power of body language: How to succeed in every business situation. 352 pp. Richards, G. (2011). Warehouse management. Kogan. 352 pages. Rigby, R. (2011). 28 Business thinkers who changed the world. Kogan. 232 pages. Romero, Steven (2011). Eliminating ‘us’ and ‘them’: Making IT and business one. Apress. 264 pages. Saj-Nicole, Joni, & Bayer, Damon (2010). The Right Fight: How Great Leaders Use Healthy Conflict to Drive Performance, Innovation, & Value. NY: HarperCollins. 256 pp. Shearhouse, Susan H. (2011). Conflict 101: A manager’s guide to resolving problems so everyone can get back to work. AMACOM. 272 pages. Tobutt, C. (2011). Alcohol at work: Managing alcohol problems & issues in the workplace. Gower. 266 pp. Tracy, Brian (2010). How the best leaders lead. NY: AMACOM. 256 pages. Vukotich, George (2011). Ten Steps to successful change management. ASTD. 250 pages. "It has been demonstrated that leaders do not treat all of their workers alike: research shows that most supervisors divide their subordinates into ingroup and outgroup members (Dansereau, Cashman, and Graen, 1973). Other work suggests that, (1) taking OB courses in college (Jones, 1990) and (2) working quickly toward a clearly-stated objective (Forrest, 1992) are also important for good leader-member relations." Note that these were not direct quotes, but I cited the sources where I got my ideas. That way the reader knows which ideas were borrowed from which sources. The works you cite should also appear at the end of your paper in a reference list. All works in the reference list should also be cited in the paper. Thus, I do NOT want to see a vague "Bibliography"--I want to know which ideas in the paper go with each source. Examples of references: (2) For journal articles-- Forrest, N. B. (January 16, 2011). My motto for success: "Get there firstest with the mostest." Journal of Vague Generalizations, 14, 128-131. Note that the underlined number is the volume number; the other numbers are page numbers. So 14, 128-131 means "volume 14, pages 128-131."
At least three of your references should come from "scholarly" sources (e.g., scholarly books, journals such as Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, Academy of Management Journal, or Journal of Applied Psychology) rather than "popular" sources (e.g., Fortune, Business Week). This will help you develop your skills at finding applications for research as well as helping you keep up with the latest developments in this scientific field. Papers without adequate references will be penalized. The reason for this policy is to insure that you adequately understand the literature on the topics you discuss, and to keep your paper from sounding like a "paraphrase" of only one or two sources. Remember to start researching your paper today! Guidelines for grading papers:#p#分页标题#e# "D" papers tend to have the following characteristics: "C" papers tend to have the following characteristics: "A" papers tend to have the following characteristics:
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