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Lecture notes Educational Management & Organization

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These are the lecture notes for Educational Management & Organization from the 2022/2023 academic year.

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  • March 30, 2023
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  • 2022/2023
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  • Maslow, ritzema & renting
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Aantekeningen Educational Organization and Management

Lecture 1: Introduction to organizational theory 8-2-2023
Assessment
 Paper and pencil test:
o Study material: articles lectures 3 to 6 (required literature) and lecture slides (available
through Brightspace);
o Date: April 4, 2023 (resit: June 22, 2023)
 Assignment:
o Analysis of a case study: case study of a secondary school, < 2000 words
o Group assignment: 4 students (deadline for group formation: February 17, 2023),
appendix with contribution of each group member
 We need lecture 1, 2 and 4 for the paper
o Deadline: April 12, 2023 (‘resit’: May 26, 2023)

Frederick W. Taylor (1856-1915)
 Scientific management theory
o We try to look for some sort of standardization
o Trying to make things more efficient
 Principles:
o Time and motion studies
o Standardization of parts and tools
 Increasing productivity
 Standardize all the different steps in a process  analyse the work process in a
technical way (stopwatch management)
 Standardization of work and materials so you don’t have to adapt in new work
situations
o Introduction of performance pay
 Paying for performance will lead to higher performance  higher earnings
o Division between planning and operation
 Not all decision-making power to the people that do the work, but have a
separate group that plans the work and a group that performs the work
o Implementation of scientific selection of personnel

Henri Fayol (1841-1925)
 Wanted to improve work processes in mining company
 Five management activities:
o Prévoir: planning and looking forward
 Identifying goals
o Organiser: assign tasks and responsibilities to workers
o Commander: command workers
 Unity of command: 1 person who designs and commands workers
 This exists in multiple layers of the organisation
 Way of structuring and influencing what happens in the organisation
o Coordonner: coordination of activities towards the goals of the organisation
 Overview of daily activities
o Contrôler: control and evaluation

Max Weber (1864-1920)
 Structure in which everyone is treated the same
 Ideal type of bureaucracy:
o Responsibility guided by rules
 If everyone has to follow the same rules, then everyone is treated the same way
o Hierarchy

, o Desk (Bureau) work based on written documents
o Specialized training
o Full-day job
o Principle of general, more or less stable, rules that can be communicated to others

Elton Mayo (1880-1949)
 Hawthorne experiments
o Behaving differently when you know you’re being observed
 Effect is caused by the observation rather than the invention
o Western Electric Company in Chicago
o 1924-1932
o Relationship between quality and quantity of illumination on workers’ performance
o Subsequently: Relay Assembly Room experiments and Bank Wiring Room experiments

Relay Assembly Test Room
 Change of work conditions:
o Length and intervals of working time and breaks;
o Total number of working hours per shift;
o Refreshments like drinks and food
o All changes (also returning to the ‘worst’ condition) led to higher performance

Bank Wiring Room
 Relationship between employees:
o Observations during work, and interviews with (male) workers;
o Despite payment by amount of work no increase in performance was found;
o Explanations: social pressures by the group, and social relationships at the workplace
 Protect the group from internal indiscretions
 Protect it from outside interference

Human Relations approach (1930-1950)
 Rationale:
o Organizations are complex social environments;
 Organisations are not just technical places
o Informal relationships are more important than the formal hierarchy;
o Groups develop their own behavioral norms, based on the specific situation, which has its
own dynamics.
 People work harder when they feel valued, get attention and are treated as a person, rather than
just a worker

Socio-technics (after 1950)
 Tavistock Institute of Human Relations:
o Found that participation of employees itself was insufficient for an adequate functioning
of organizations;
o Joint optimization of the technical system and the social system.
 Socio-technical systems

Systems theory
 Organizations are conceived as, and analyzed as systems
o Input, throughput (process) and output
 Output should be according to the goals of the organisation
o Interrelations between ‘units’ and environment (feedback)
 Don’t just look at the organisation, but at its relationships with the environment
o Aggregate levels

,  Separate units/levels of the organisation and its relationships with other units
and the environment
 Modern version: the learning organization (Peter Senge)

Contingency theory (after 1960)
 Joan Woodward: unit production, mass production and process production;
o Ultimate span of control: how many people can someone supervise?
o If we make units, how big should they be?
o There is no best span of control, it depends on the type of organisation and workflow
 Paul Lawrence and Jay Lorsch: differentiation and integration
o Environments are structured in different ways
o Best way of coordinating tasks within an organisation depends on type of activities,
stakeholders, organisation, situation, requirements, demands
 Henry Mintzberg: configuration and congruency
o Look for the best way of coordination, given the context

Designing effective organisations
 Identification and distribution of tasks (division of labour)
 Linking of the tasks to one another (coordination)

Design parameters




Comparison to human body:
1. Bones
2. Connection between bones: skeleton
3. Muscles
4. Brain  decision-making

 Specialisation: horizontal & vertical
 Formalization of behaviour: less relevant in school, but still part of education (example: testing
processes)
 Unit size (related to span of control): not really relevant in education
o There are units (esp. in secondary education) but not a lot of supervision  what
teachers do and know is determined by their training, not by supervisors
 Planning and control: in the last decades there have been more rules and requirements for
teachers
 Horizontal decentralization: power is given to multiple people and teams, they have power over
their own part of the organisation
 Vertical decentralization: someone higher in the hierarchy can give a direct command to someone
lower in the hierarchy

Typology of the environment
 Four dimensions:
o Complexity (knowledge to deal with demands)
 If the organisation is more complex, you need more knowledge to handle it
o Diversity (variation but predictable changes)

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