"The 'silly question' is the first intimation of some totally new development."
In this course we will study organizations in some depth and ask, as philosopher Alfred North Whitehead says, some "silly questions". Why do organizations exist? What what life like before they become larger and more powerful? Are organizations really efficient? Who actually controls them and who should? Why do many people have trouble with bureaucracy? How is the computer revolution changing organizational life? Is there such a thing as a bureaucratic personality? When do organizations serve human ends and when do they subvert them? How can you exert more influence over the impact they have on your life and the kind of society you live in?
Disclaimer: Seton Hall University is not responsible for the content of these pages and/or the content of any pages or links that flow from them. As the professor for this course, I take responsibility only for the content that I write myself on these pages, not for the content of the Web sites included or their links. If anyone wishes to use my work, please feel free to do so.
Course Goals
1. Identify and use sociological
ideas and frameworks to analyze organizations
2. Use knowledge to identify
organizational problems and suggest feasible solutions
to them
3. Use critical thinking
skills to debate various policy issues about organizations
4. Demonstrate an ability
to analyze qualitative and quantitative organizational data.
5. Evaluate and critique
ethical issues in organizations
6. Learn how Information
Technology is likely to change organizations
Grades
Two tests and a Final Exam - 1/3rd each
Text
R. Richard
Ritti. The Ropes to Skip and the Ropes to Know, 5th ed. Wiley,
1998.
Here are some additional items to help you
with your course. Consider bookmarking some of these. Click
through them early in the semester to get a feel for what they provide.
Visit
Search Engine Watch if you are new to (or enjoy) them. In addition
to the bigger ones, like Yahoo!, Altavista
or Lycos there are a many
others that are helpful and friendly. My favorite is Northern
Light and Dogpile is a multi-search
engine that uses several good search engines.
PART 1 THE ORGANIZATION OF SOCIAL LIFE
A. The Whys and Ways of Organizing Ourselves
1. What sociologists mean
by "organization" (slide
show)
2. From micro to macro
levels of organizational existence (slide
show)
3. Types of organizations
(slide show)
4. Money vs. Profit: an
important organizational difference (slide
show)
5. Organizations as social systems
B. Max Weber and the Process of Rationalization
1. Read: brief commentaries on Weber's
ideas about: authority, bureaucracy and rationalization on Weber's
Home
Page.
(This
Page is created/maintained by Frank Elwell, 1996, Verstehen: Max Weber's
HomePage)
2. Best/Worst Experiences: Now that we've had some time to THINK about the organizations in our lives, let's turn to our EXPERIENCES with some of them. Of course, Seton Hall U. comes to mind, as well as places you have worked , or clubs, sports teams, churches/temples or other organization that you belong to. BRING TO CLASS a short paragraph each on the worst and best experience you've had with an organization. Analyze your experiences using some of the ideas/concepts, principles and themes from this and your other courses to date. Identify in your answer some important issues/problems/ideas related in these experiences.
3. Read: Bowling
Alone. Bring in a one page reply to this interview with
Robert Putman: How good is the evidence for his position? What other evidence
might undermine his points? Do you agree with his suggested solutions and
why?
PART II. LIFE INSIDE ORGANIZATIONS
C. Learning the Ropes
1. Read: Ritti. The Ropes' Prologue and Part One: all sections
2. Read a few chapter summaries from Harvey Robbins and Michael Finley's newest version of Why Teams Don't Work.
3. Why are
we laughing? Find some cartoons from The
New Yorker Magazine that deal with
organizations.
Test #1
D. Power and Being Marginal in the Organization
1. Read: Ropes Part IV and all sections
2. Read: The Glass Ceiling
3.
Read: The
New Power Elite
Read: Ropes Part III and all sections
F. Organizations as Criminals
1. Read: White Collar and Corporate Deviance
2. Surf: Corporate
Watch (read one article about an organization in the U.S. and
one outside the U.S.)
PART III PERSONAL AND SOCIAL RESPONSES TO ORGANIZATIONS
1. Surf:
Slow
Food. Read about how food used to taste and how
international organizations are fighting theMcDonaldization
of our food. How successful is this likely to be and why?
2. Un-organizing
Ourselves: Surf this site for a variety of options that
turn organizations into sources of personal and societal
strength. Which is most appealing to you and why?
"Analyze, don't moralize".
3. Play
the U.S.Budget
Game: See if you can fix things by changing
who gets the taxpayers' dollars. Which allocation of
budget dollars best reflects democratic values in the U.S.
and why?
4. Read: The Adaptable Workforce Are you ready for the "new contract"?
5. Read: The
Office A look at the future of the electronic office.
Final Exam