30465 - ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
Department of Management and Technology
FRANCESCA PRANDSTRALLER
Suggested background knowledge
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
- Main organizational structures
- Rewards and job design
- Human behavior inside an organization.
- Individual differences (personality, values, interpersonal perception, emotions and stress, motivations).
- Groups and group dynamics.
- Power and leadership.
- Conflict and negotiation
- Organizational and international Culture.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
The course is designed to accomplish three main goals:
- Increase your knowledge of OB concepts so that you can understand and analyze how organizations and the people within them work.
- Provide you with opportunities to apply OB concepts to real-world problems faced by managers.
- Provide the ability to become knowledgeable organization members (development of attitudes).
To effectively work in an organization, you must be able to diagnose problems, communicate clearly, make effective decisions, motivate and influence others, manage diversity, and understand organizational structure and change.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Understand the functioning of an organizational system, the dimensions of individual and social behavior in an organization, the organizational structure and culture and the main human resource management practices.
- Apply skills related to Individual Behavior and Group dynamics, effective communication and negotiation.
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Guest speaker's talks (in class or in distance)
- Case studies /Incidents (traditional, online)
- Group assignments
- Interactive class activities (role playing, business game, simulation, online forum, instant polls)
DETAILS
- In-class exercises to understand the language and to apply models and theory.
- Theories and/or case studies discussions (in-class).
- Group assignments to learn how to apply theories to reality.
- Interactive activities to learn and practice behavioral skills (communication, team work, negotiation).
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING STUDENTS
The assessment of attending students is divided in a midterm exam (30% of the final grade), a final exam (30% of the final grade) and a graded field group work (40% of the final grade).
Midterm exam for attending students: October 20th 202, h. 9.00 am
ATTENTION:
1) Attending students who did not take the midterm or are not satisfied with their midterm grades, can refuse the midterm grade and take again the entire general exam at the end of the course (60% of the final grade).
2) Field Project grades will expire after the January session of 2021 meaning that it is possible to be considered attending only until the session of January included.
3) In order to pass the final exam the total of the midterm and the final individual exams must be graded at least 18, + the grade of the group field work.
4) Students who fail the attending exam MUST retake the exam as NON ATTENDING in the next exam sessions.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
For non-attending students, the assessment is based exclusively on their performance in the final exam.
- The final exam is a true/false and multiple-choice test (31 points), and is “closed-book”, “no-notes” (i.e. no materials can be used during the exam).
- The exam consists of a mix of pure theoretical questions and applications of models and theoretical concepts and case studies from the two whole textbooks.
- The exam is graded with a range of 0 - 31 points, with a fixed grade distribution based on the standard Bocconi undergrad grading policy (from 0/31 to 17/31 the exam is failed) and no penalization for wrong answers.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING STUDENTS
The material for this course is made of slides provided by the instructor, and research and practitioner papers, textbook.
- MCSHANE, VON GLINOW, Organizational behavior, McGrawHill 2018, 8th edition. ISBN 978-1-259-92170-4
- In class, we use slides to present the main ideas and guide the discussion. The slides and the bibliography of the papers are posted on Bboard. Students can download copies of the slides, but they need to connect to the Bocconi Library to search and download the articles.
- Note that for attending students this book is not a complete replacement for the assigned papers, lecture notes and slides, as they may follows a different organization: some issues that we cover in-depth in the course in class receive only a brief treatment in the book, and vice versa.
NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
- MCSHANE, VON GLINOW, Organizational behavior, McGrawHill 2018, 8th edition. ISBN 978-1-259-92170-4.
- STETTNER, Skills for new managers, McGraw-Hill 2014, 2nd Edition.
The two entire textbook are mandatory for non-attending students.