Deck 15: Organizational Change

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Question
In Lewin's force field analysis model, refreezing involves producing a disequilibrium between the current and future state.
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Question
In force field analysis, stability occurs when the driving forces and restraining forces are roughly of equal strength in opposite directions.
Question
People sometimes resist change to prove that the change agent is incompetent.
Question
Employee resistance to change most often takes the form of overt work behaviors.
Question
In Lewin's force field analysis model, refreezing occurs when the organization's systems and structures are aligned with the desired behaviors.
Question
To minimize resistance to change, change agents need to reduce the restraining forces rather than pushing harder on the driving forces.
Question
According to some experts, the subtle forms of resistance create the greatest obstacles to change because they are not as visible.
Question
An emerging view of employee resistance to change is that it is a resource rather than impediment to change in modern organizations.
Question
Fear of the unknown usually motivates employees to support organizational change.
Question
Unfreezing occurs by making the driving forces stronger, weakening the restraining forces, or a combination of both.
Question
Resistance to change is a form of dysfunctional conflict that must be addressed.
Question
In some situations, resistance to change occurs when employees are worried about the consequences of change.
Question
When people support change, they typically assume that it is others who need to change.
Question
Direct costs, fear of the unknown and incongruent organizational systems are all sources of resistance to change.
Question
Organizational systems such as rewards, patterns of authority, career paths, and selection criteria are not reasons why employees resist change because the choice to resist is internal rather than externally-based.
Question
The preferred strategy for unfreezing the current situation is to increase the restraining forces and reduce or remove the driving forces.
Question
If change agents adopted the view that resistance is a resource and harnessed its motivational force, they could strengthen commitment to change initiatives.
Question
The force field analysis model states that stability is achieved only when the driving forces for change subside and are replaced by restraining forces acting in the same direction.
Question
One reason why employees resist change is that they dislike predictable role patterns.
Question
An emerging view of employee resistance to change is that it is a dysfunctional and irrational response to a desirable initiative which should be eliminated in modern organizations.
Question
Negotiation is the highest priority and first strategy required for any organizational change.
Question
Information systems and reward systems help to refreeze the desired conditions in organizational change.
Question
Customer feedback provides a human element that energizes employees to change their current behavior patterns.
Question
One drawback with increased communication during the change process is that it also increases the level and sources of resistance.
Question
Pilot projects are usually more flexible and less risky than centralized, organization-wide programs.
Question
By creating a sense of urgency for change, change agents are motivating employees to change towards the new conditions.
Question
Coercion should never be used to manage change in organizations.
Question
One problem with negotiation is that it tends to produce compliance rather than commitment to the change process.
Question
The best way to manage resistance to change among those who will clearly lose out from the change is to introduce coercion practices.
Question
Transformational leaders are effective change agents.
Question
Communication should be applied to reduce resistance to change where the change must occur quickly with little financial cost.
Question
Coaching and other forms of learning reduce resistance to change mainly by helping employees break previous routines and develop new role patterns.
Question
Most change agents are external consultants rather than corporate executives.
Question
Diffusion of change is more likely to succeed if some people who have worked under the new system are moved to other areas of the organization.
Question
Refreezing requires the establishment of organizational systems that are compatible with the desired change.
Question
To bring about effective change, leaders must create an urgency to change internally rather than rely on forces outside the organization to create that urgency.
Question
Organizational change is more successful if the change agent prevents its diffusion from one part of the organization to other parts.
Question
Successful change requires a well-articulated and appealing vision of the desired future state.
Question
The urgency for change must always be initiated from a problem-oriented perspective in order to be effective.
Question
A minimalist communication strategy should always be used to facilitate organizational change.
Question
Future search events minimize resistance to change mainly as a form of employee involvement.
Question
Organizational diagnosis involves collecting and interpreting data about an ongoing system and feeding this data back to the client.
Question
Discovery, dreaming, and delivering are the first three stages of appreciative inquiry.
Question
Action research is a problem-focused process of organizational change.
Question
Compared with quantum change, incremental change interventions involve less risk to the organization and tend to produce less resistance among affected employees.
Question
A parallel learning structure is an organizational change intervention in which a social structure is constructed alongside the formal hierarchy to increase the organization's learning.
Question
Appreciative inquiry tries to break away from the approach to change advocated by action research.
Question
Action research takes the view that organizational change is all about creating real change, not testing theory.
Question
Consultants involved in organizational change should first determine the client's readiness for change.
Question
Future search conferences are large group sessions, usually lasting a few days, in which participants identify the environmental trends and establish strategic solutions for those conditions.
Question
Quantum change is most commonly applied in conjunction with employee involvement.
Question
Action research is the process of determining whether the change process is ethical or not.
Question
The first step in appreciative inquiry is dreaming, in which participants envision what might be possible in an ideal organization.
Question
Future search conferences are meetings among a small task force of senior executives who have been given the mandate to look for a change agent on a particular corporate strategy.
Question
Change experts recommend introducing quantum change when the organization wants to overhaul the system quickly and decisively.
Question
Future search events minimize resistance to change with little or no involvement from employees.
Question
One of the main advantages of quantum change is that it is less risky than incremental change.
Question
Action research adopts the emerging philosophy of positive organizational behavior.
Question
A unique feature of appreciative inquiry is that it breaks away from the problem-solving mentality by reframing relationships around what is positive and possible.
Question
Change agents should apply the action research model if they want to help people to break out of a problem-solving mentality and, instead, reframe relationships around the positive and possible.
Question
Which of these forces are commonly called resistance to change?

A)Process forces
B)Driving forces
C)Parallel learning structures
D)Restraining forces
E)Unfreezing forces
Question
Which of these forces pushes organizations toward a new state of affairs?

A)Process forces
B)Driving forces
C)Parallel learning structures
D)Restraining forces
E)None of the above
Question
Which of these is identified by research as the most important barrier to corporate restructuring?

A)Executive interest
B)Managerial incompetence
C)Governmental changes and regulations
D)Employee resistance
E)None of the above
Question
Which of the following types of resistance to change is often a deliberate strategy to 'prove' that the decision is wrong or that the change agent is incompetent?

A)Direct costs.
B)Saving face.
C)Fear of the unknown.
D)Breaking routines.
E)Incongruent organizational systems.
Question
Resistance to organizational change may be caused by:

A)employee perceptions that the new conditions have higher costs and fewer benefits for them.
B)the psychological cost of uncertainty about the personal risks involved in the change.
C)employees wanting to prove that change effort won't work because they dislike the change agent or the action is contrary to their recommendations.
D)All of these may cause resistance to change.
E)None of these causes resistance to change.
Question
The main objective of force field analysis is to help change agents to:

A)identify ways to force employees to change their behavior.
B)find ways to increase the driving forces for change.
C)diagnose the situation better by understanding the driving and constraining forces for change.
D)determine whether change is necessary at all.
E)Do 'A' and 'B' only.
Question
Unfreezing refers to:

A)getting one's own way in organizational politics.
B)a management practice used to discourage newcomers from staying with the organization.
C)ensuring that the change effort is diffused to others within the organization.
D)improving organizational communication.
E)producing a disequilibrium between the driving and restraining forces of change.
Question
Parallel learning structures are structures that primarily help employees learn on the job rather than in the classroom.
Question
An ethical problem with many organizational change programs is that management tends to lose power in the process.
Question
Refreezing refers to:

A)getting one's own way in organizational politics.
B)a management practice used to discourage newcomers from staying with the organization.
C)aligning the organization's systems with the desired behaviors to support and reinforce the new role patterns.
D)repeating the change process a second time, because the first attempt to freeze the changes were unsuccessful.
E)producing a disequilibrium between the driving and restraining forces of change.
Question
The concepts of unfreezing and refreezing the system are mainly represented in:

A)Action research.
B)Lewin's force field model.
C)Appreciative inquiry.
D)Customer-driven change.
E)The diffusion of change process.
Question
The force field analysis model includes all of the following EXCEPT:

A)process forces.
B)driving forces.
C)unfreezing.
D)refreezing.
E)restraining forces.
Question
The parallel learning approach model, built on the idea of collecting information from organizational members, raises concerns about the risk of violating individual privacy rights.
Question
One ethical concern with some organizational change programs is that they may threaten the employee's self-esteem.
Question
Which model of organization change explicitly refers to unfreezing the current situation and refreezing the desired state?

A)Parallel learning structures
B)Process consultation
C)Appreciative inquiry
D)Quantum change
E)Force field analysis
Question
An important feature of parallel learning structures is that they operate within the existing organizational hierarchy.
Question
Increasing the driving forces and reducing the restraining forces tends to:

A)reduce the need for change.
B)unfreeze the status quo.
C)refreeze the status quo.
D)increase environmental stability.
E)cause none of these outcomes.
Question
The chief executive of a large telecommunications company wanted to restructure the organization so product leaders would have more power than the executives in charge of each region.The regional executives tried to prevent this restructuring because it would weaken their power and possibly reduce their salaries in the long term.This action by the regional executives is mainly an example of resistance due to:

A)direct costs.
B)saving face.
C)fear of the unknown.
D)breaking routines.
E)incongruent organizational systems.
Question
Some organizational scholars suggest that 'resistance to change' actually represents:

A)symptoms of underlying restraining forces that needs to be removed.
B)incidents in which employees are happy with the status quo and do not want any change in their organization.
C)the change agent's distorted perceptions of employee behavior based on their own doubts about the success of the change process.
D)indications that change is not required in the organization.
E)All of the above.
Question
In organizational change, unfreezing may occur by:

A)increasing the restraining forces
B)increasing the driving forces
C)reducing the urgency to change
D)reducing the restraining forces
E)Doing both 'B' and 'D'
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Deck 15: Organizational Change
1
In Lewin's force field analysis model, refreezing involves producing a disequilibrium between the current and future state.
False
2
In force field analysis, stability occurs when the driving forces and restraining forces are roughly of equal strength in opposite directions.
True
3
People sometimes resist change to prove that the change agent is incompetent.
True
4
Employee resistance to change most often takes the form of overt work behaviors.
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5
In Lewin's force field analysis model, refreezing occurs when the organization's systems and structures are aligned with the desired behaviors.
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6
To minimize resistance to change, change agents need to reduce the restraining forces rather than pushing harder on the driving forces.
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7
According to some experts, the subtle forms of resistance create the greatest obstacles to change because they are not as visible.
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8
An emerging view of employee resistance to change is that it is a resource rather than impediment to change in modern organizations.
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9
Fear of the unknown usually motivates employees to support organizational change.
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10
Unfreezing occurs by making the driving forces stronger, weakening the restraining forces, or a combination of both.
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11
Resistance to change is a form of dysfunctional conflict that must be addressed.
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12
In some situations, resistance to change occurs when employees are worried about the consequences of change.
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13
When people support change, they typically assume that it is others who need to change.
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14
Direct costs, fear of the unknown and incongruent organizational systems are all sources of resistance to change.
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15
Organizational systems such as rewards, patterns of authority, career paths, and selection criteria are not reasons why employees resist change because the choice to resist is internal rather than externally-based.
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16
The preferred strategy for unfreezing the current situation is to increase the restraining forces and reduce or remove the driving forces.
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17
If change agents adopted the view that resistance is a resource and harnessed its motivational force, they could strengthen commitment to change initiatives.
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18
The force field analysis model states that stability is achieved only when the driving forces for change subside and are replaced by restraining forces acting in the same direction.
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19
One reason why employees resist change is that they dislike predictable role patterns.
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20
An emerging view of employee resistance to change is that it is a dysfunctional and irrational response to a desirable initiative which should be eliminated in modern organizations.
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21
Negotiation is the highest priority and first strategy required for any organizational change.
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22
Information systems and reward systems help to refreeze the desired conditions in organizational change.
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23
Customer feedback provides a human element that energizes employees to change their current behavior patterns.
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24
One drawback with increased communication during the change process is that it also increases the level and sources of resistance.
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25
Pilot projects are usually more flexible and less risky than centralized, organization-wide programs.
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26
By creating a sense of urgency for change, change agents are motivating employees to change towards the new conditions.
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27
Coercion should never be used to manage change in organizations.
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28
One problem with negotiation is that it tends to produce compliance rather than commitment to the change process.
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29
The best way to manage resistance to change among those who will clearly lose out from the change is to introduce coercion practices.
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30
Transformational leaders are effective change agents.
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31
Communication should be applied to reduce resistance to change where the change must occur quickly with little financial cost.
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k this deck
32
Coaching and other forms of learning reduce resistance to change mainly by helping employees break previous routines and develop new role patterns.
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k this deck
33
Most change agents are external consultants rather than corporate executives.
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34
Diffusion of change is more likely to succeed if some people who have worked under the new system are moved to other areas of the organization.
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35
Refreezing requires the establishment of organizational systems that are compatible with the desired change.
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36
To bring about effective change, leaders must create an urgency to change internally rather than rely on forces outside the organization to create that urgency.
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k this deck
37
Organizational change is more successful if the change agent prevents its diffusion from one part of the organization to other parts.
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k this deck
38
Successful change requires a well-articulated and appealing vision of the desired future state.
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k this deck
39
The urgency for change must always be initiated from a problem-oriented perspective in order to be effective.
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40
A minimalist communication strategy should always be used to facilitate organizational change.
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k this deck
41
Future search events minimize resistance to change mainly as a form of employee involvement.
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k this deck
42
Organizational diagnosis involves collecting and interpreting data about an ongoing system and feeding this data back to the client.
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k this deck
43
Discovery, dreaming, and delivering are the first three stages of appreciative inquiry.
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k this deck
44
Action research is a problem-focused process of organizational change.
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45
Compared with quantum change, incremental change interventions involve less risk to the organization and tend to produce less resistance among affected employees.
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k this deck
46
A parallel learning structure is an organizational change intervention in which a social structure is constructed alongside the formal hierarchy to increase the organization's learning.
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Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
47
Appreciative inquiry tries to break away from the approach to change advocated by action research.
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k this deck
48
Action research takes the view that organizational change is all about creating real change, not testing theory.
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k this deck
49
Consultants involved in organizational change should first determine the client's readiness for change.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
50
Future search conferences are large group sessions, usually lasting a few days, in which participants identify the environmental trends and establish strategic solutions for those conditions.
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k this deck
51
Quantum change is most commonly applied in conjunction with employee involvement.
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k this deck
52
Action research is the process of determining whether the change process is ethical or not.
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k this deck
53
The first step in appreciative inquiry is dreaming, in which participants envision what might be possible in an ideal organization.
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k this deck
54
Future search conferences are meetings among a small task force of senior executives who have been given the mandate to look for a change agent on a particular corporate strategy.
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k this deck
55
Change experts recommend introducing quantum change when the organization wants to overhaul the system quickly and decisively.
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k this deck
56
Future search events minimize resistance to change with little or no involvement from employees.
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k this deck
57
One of the main advantages of quantum change is that it is less risky than incremental change.
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k this deck
58
Action research adopts the emerging philosophy of positive organizational behavior.
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k this deck
59
A unique feature of appreciative inquiry is that it breaks away from the problem-solving mentality by reframing relationships around what is positive and possible.
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Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
Change agents should apply the action research model if they want to help people to break out of a problem-solving mentality and, instead, reframe relationships around the positive and possible.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Which of these forces are commonly called resistance to change?

A)Process forces
B)Driving forces
C)Parallel learning structures
D)Restraining forces
E)Unfreezing forces
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62
Which of these forces pushes organizations toward a new state of affairs?

A)Process forces
B)Driving forces
C)Parallel learning structures
D)Restraining forces
E)None of the above
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k this deck
63
Which of these is identified by research as the most important barrier to corporate restructuring?

A)Executive interest
B)Managerial incompetence
C)Governmental changes and regulations
D)Employee resistance
E)None of the above
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Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
Which of the following types of resistance to change is often a deliberate strategy to 'prove' that the decision is wrong or that the change agent is incompetent?

A)Direct costs.
B)Saving face.
C)Fear of the unknown.
D)Breaking routines.
E)Incongruent organizational systems.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Resistance to organizational change may be caused by:

A)employee perceptions that the new conditions have higher costs and fewer benefits for them.
B)the psychological cost of uncertainty about the personal risks involved in the change.
C)employees wanting to prove that change effort won't work because they dislike the change agent or the action is contrary to their recommendations.
D)All of these may cause resistance to change.
E)None of these causes resistance to change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
The main objective of force field analysis is to help change agents to:

A)identify ways to force employees to change their behavior.
B)find ways to increase the driving forces for change.
C)diagnose the situation better by understanding the driving and constraining forces for change.
D)determine whether change is necessary at all.
E)Do 'A' and 'B' only.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Unfreezing refers to:

A)getting one's own way in organizational politics.
B)a management practice used to discourage newcomers from staying with the organization.
C)ensuring that the change effort is diffused to others within the organization.
D)improving organizational communication.
E)producing a disequilibrium between the driving and restraining forces of change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
Parallel learning structures are structures that primarily help employees learn on the job rather than in the classroom.
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k this deck
69
An ethical problem with many organizational change programs is that management tends to lose power in the process.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Refreezing refers to:

A)getting one's own way in organizational politics.
B)a management practice used to discourage newcomers from staying with the organization.
C)aligning the organization's systems with the desired behaviors to support and reinforce the new role patterns.
D)repeating the change process a second time, because the first attempt to freeze the changes were unsuccessful.
E)producing a disequilibrium between the driving and restraining forces of change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
The concepts of unfreezing and refreezing the system are mainly represented in:

A)Action research.
B)Lewin's force field model.
C)Appreciative inquiry.
D)Customer-driven change.
E)The diffusion of change process.
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Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
The force field analysis model includes all of the following EXCEPT:

A)process forces.
B)driving forces.
C)unfreezing.
D)refreezing.
E)restraining forces.
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73
The parallel learning approach model, built on the idea of collecting information from organizational members, raises concerns about the risk of violating individual privacy rights.
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Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
74
One ethical concern with some organizational change programs is that they may threaten the employee's self-esteem.
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Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
75
Which model of organization change explicitly refers to unfreezing the current situation and refreezing the desired state?

A)Parallel learning structures
B)Process consultation
C)Appreciative inquiry
D)Quantum change
E)Force field analysis
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76
An important feature of parallel learning structures is that they operate within the existing organizational hierarchy.
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77
Increasing the driving forces and reducing the restraining forces tends to:

A)reduce the need for change.
B)unfreeze the status quo.
C)refreeze the status quo.
D)increase environmental stability.
E)cause none of these outcomes.
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Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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78
The chief executive of a large telecommunications company wanted to restructure the organization so product leaders would have more power than the executives in charge of each region.The regional executives tried to prevent this restructuring because it would weaken their power and possibly reduce their salaries in the long term.This action by the regional executives is mainly an example of resistance due to:

A)direct costs.
B)saving face.
C)fear of the unknown.
D)breaking routines.
E)incongruent organizational systems.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Some organizational scholars suggest that 'resistance to change' actually represents:

A)symptoms of underlying restraining forces that needs to be removed.
B)incidents in which employees are happy with the status quo and do not want any change in their organization.
C)the change agent's distorted perceptions of employee behavior based on their own doubts about the success of the change process.
D)indications that change is not required in the organization.
E)All of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 147 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
In organizational change, unfreezing may occur by:

A)increasing the restraining forces
B)increasing the driving forces
C)reducing the urgency to change
D)reducing the restraining forces
E)Doing both 'B' and 'D'
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locked card icon
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