Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
Purchase Benefits
Jeffrey M. Conte is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology at San Diego State University. He received his B.A. from the University of Virginia and his Ph.D. in Industrial and Organizational Psychology from Penn State University. He teaches courses in introductory I-O psychology, advanced personnel psychology, and psychological testing and measurement. His research interests include personnel selection, personality predictors of job performance, time management, the measurement of emotional intelligence, and the factors associated with health and stress in the workplace. Jeff also has interests in cross-cultural research and has conducted research in organizations across the United States as well as in Canada and France. Jeff’s research has been funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. He has published in and provided reviews for many I-O psychology and management journals. Jeff has worked with a variety of organizations addressing such issues as human resource selection, performance appraisal, stress, training evaluation, and organizational factors related to safety. His research and practice has included a wide variety of occupations including lawyers, engineers, firefighters, police officers, and public transportation drivers.
Preface | p. xx |
Fundamentals | |
What is Industrial and Organizational Psychology? | p. 2 |
The Importance of I-O Psychology | p. 3 |
The Importance of Work in People's Lives | p. 3 |
The Concept of "Good Work" versus "Good Job" | p. 4 |
How Does I-O Psychology Contribute to Society? | p. 8 |
What Is I-O Psychology? | p. 8 |
SIOP as a Resource | p. 11 |
How This Course Can Help You | p. 11 |
Knowledge About the 21st-Century Workplace | p. 11 |
The Importance of Understanding the Younger Worker | p. 14 |
The Past, Present, and Future of I-O Psychology | p. 16 |
The Past: A Brief History of I-O Psychology | p. 16 |
1876-1930 | p. 17 |
1930-1964 | p. 20 |
The Present: Demographics of I-O Psychologists | p. 22 |
Pathways to a Career in I-O Psychology: A Curious Mixture | p. 23 |
The Future: The Challenges to I-O Psychology in the 21st Century | p. 24 |
A Personal View of the Future: Preparing for a Career in I-O Psychology | p. 25 |
Education and Training | p. 25 |
Getting into a Graduale Program | p. 25 |
Multicultural and Cross-Cultural Issues in I-O Psychology | p. 28 |
Multiculturalism | p. 28 |
The Multicultural Nature of Work in the 21st Century | p. 30 |
Why Should Multiculturalism Be Important to You? | p. 32 |
Why Is Multiculturalism Important for I-O Psychology? | p. 32 |
Some Theories of Cultural Influence | p. 33 |
Hofstede's Theory | p. 34 |
Some Thoughts on Theories of Cultural Influence | p. 36 |
The Organization of This Book | p. 40 |
Themes | p. 40 |
Parts | p. 41 |
Resources | p. 42 |
Methods and Statistics in I-O Psychology | p. 48 |
Science | p. 49 |
What Is Science? | p. 49 |
The Role of Science in Society | p. 50 |
Why Do I-O Psychologists Engage in Research? | p. 51 |
Research | p. 53 |
Research Design | p. 53 |
Methods of Data Collection | p. 55 |
Qualitative and Quantitative Research | p. 55 |
The Importance of Context in Interpreting Research | p. 56 |
Generalizability and Control in Research | p. 57 |
Generalizability | p. 57 |
Control | p. 58 |
Ethical Behavior in I-O Psychology | p. 59 |
Data Analysis | p. 62 |
Descriptive and Inferential Statistics | p. 62 |
Descriptive Statistics | p. 62 |
Inferential Statistics | p. 63 |
Statistical Significance | p. 64 |
The Concept of Statistical Power | p. 65 |
Correlation and Regression | p. 65 |
The Concept of Correlation | p. 66 |
The Correlation Coefficient | p. 66 |
Multiple Correlation | p. 68 |
Correlation and Causation | p. 68 |
Meta-Analysis | p. 69 |
Micro-, Macro-, and Meso-Research | p. 71 |
Interpretation | p. 73 |
Reliability | p. 73 |
Test-Retest Reliability | p. 74 |
Equivalent Forms Reliability | p. 74 |
Internal Consistency | p. 75 |
Inter-Rater Reliability | p. 75 |
Validity | p. 76 |
Criterion-Related Validity | p. 77 |
Content-Related Validity | p. 79 |
Construct-Related Validity | p. 80 |
Validity and the Law: A Mixed Blessing | p. 82 |
Industrial Psychology | p. 85 |
Individual Differences and Assessment | p. 86 |
An Introduction to Individual Differences | p. 87 |
Some Background | p. 87 |
Differential Psychology, Psychometrics, and I-O Psychology | p. 88 |
Identifying Individual Differences | p. 89 |
Varieties of Individual Differences | p. 89 |
Human Attributes | p. 93 |
Abilities | p. 93 |
Cognitive Abilities | p. 93 |
Intelligence as "g" | p. 93 |
Is "g" Important at Work? | p. 94 |
Is "g" as Important in Other Countries as It Is in the U.S.? | p. 95 |
Can Your Level of "g" Change? | p. 95 |
Cognitive Abilities beyond "g" | p. 95 |
Physical, Sensory, and Psychomotor Abilities | p. 97 |
Physical Abilities | p. 97 |
Sensory Abilities | p. 98 |
Psychomotor Abilities | p. 99 |
Personality and Interests | p. 99 |
Personality | p. 99 |
The Five Factor Model | p. 100 |
Vocational Interests | p. 105 |
Additional Attributes | p. 107 |
Skills | p. 107 |
Knowledge | p. 107 |
Experience | p. 108 |
Competencies | p. 109 |
Emotional Intelligence | p. 110 |
Foundations of Assessment | p. 113 |
The Past and the Present of Testing | p. 113 |
What Is a Test? | p. 115 |
What is the Meaning of a Test Score | p. 115 |
Test Users and Test Interpretation | p. 116 |
What Is a Test Battery? | p. 116 |
Where to Find Tests | p. 118 |
Administrative Test Categories | p. 119 |
Speed versus Power Tests | p. 119 |
Group versus Individual Tests | p. 119 |
Paper and Pencil versus Performance Tests | p. 120 |
Testing and Culture | p. 120 |
International Assessment Practices | p. 123 |
Assessment Procedures | p. 125 |
Assessment Content versus Process | p. 125 |
Assessment Procedures: Content | p. 125 |
Cognitive Ability Tests | p. 125 |
Knowledge Tests | p. 127 |
Tests of Physical Abilities | p. 127 |
Psychomotor Abilities | p. 128 |
Personality | p. 128 |
Practical Issues Associated with Personality Measures | p. 129 |
Integrity Testing | p. 132 |
Emotional Intelligence | p. 134 |
Interests and Values | p. 135 |
Individual Assessment | p. 136 |
Interviews | p. 137 |
Interview Content | p. 137 |
Interview Process | p. 139 |
Assessment Centers | p. 140 |
Work Samples and Situational Tests | p. 143 |
Work Sample Tests | p. 143 |
Situational Judgment Tests | p. 144 |
Special Topics in Assessment | p. 148 |
Incremental Validity | p. 148 |
Biographical Data | p. 149 |
Grades and Letters of Recommendation | p. 152 |
Minimum Qualifications | p. 152 |
Useless Assessment Practices: Graphology and the Polygraph | p. 153 |
Drug and Alcohol Testing | p. 154 |
Computer and Internet Assessment | p. 155 |
Who Is a Candidate? | p. 158 |
Computer Adaptive Testing | p. 158 |
Testing and Demographic Differences | p. 159 |
Understanding Performance | p. 161 |
A Basic Model of Performance | p. 162 |
Campbell's Model of Job Performance | p. 162 |
Criterion Deficiency and Contamination | p. 166 |
A Broader View | p. 167 |
Extensions of the Basic Performance Model | p. 169 |
Task Performance versus Organizational Citizenship Behavior | p. 169 |
Causes and Correlates of OCB | p. 171 |
Types of Performance Measures | p. 173 |
Adaptive Performance | p. 173 |
A Comprehensive Framework for Considering Performance: The "Great Eight" | p. 175 |
The Case of Expert Performance | p. 176 |
Constraints on Performance: Counterproductive Work Behaviors | p. 178 |
Causes and Treatments for CWB | p. 181 |
Citizenship Revisited | p. 182 |
Job Analysis: Fundamental Properties and Practices | p. 183 |
The Uses of Job Analysis Information | p. 183 |
A Brief History of Job Analysis | p. 185 |
Types of Job Analysis | p. 185 |
How Job Analysis Is Done | p. 188 |
Job Analysis: Newer Developments | p. 191 |
Electronic Performance Monitoring as Part of a Job Analysis | p. 191 |
Cognitive Task Analysis | p. 192 |
The Context of Work | p. 194 |
Personality-Based Job Analysis | p. 195 |
A Summary of the Job Analysis Process | p. 195 |
Computer-Based Job Analysis | p. 197 |
O*NET | p. 198 |
Competency Modeling | p. 201 |
Job Evaluation, Comparable worth, and the Law | p. 204 |
Job Evaluation | p. 204 |
An Example of a Job Evaluation | p. 204 |
The Concept of Comparable Worth | p. 206 |
Job Analysis and Employment Litigation | p. 208 |
The Special Case of Overtime Pay | p. 209 |
Performance Measurement | p. 211 |
Basic Concepts in Performance Measurement | p. 212 |
Uses for Performance Information | p. 212 |
Types of Performance Data | p. 213 |
Relationships among Performance Measures | p. 213 |
Hands-On Performance Measures | p. 213 |
Electronic Performance Monitoring | p. 215 |
Performance Management | p. 217 |
Perceptions of Fairness in Performance Management | p. 218 |
Performance Rating-Substance | p. 222 |
Close-Up on a Rating System | p. 222 |
Theories of Performance Rating | p. 223 |
Focus on Performance Ratings | p. 224 |
Overall Performance Ratings | p. 224 |
Trait Ratings | p. 225 |
Task-Based Ratings | p. 226 |
Critical Incidents Methods | p. 226 |
OCB and Adaptive Performance Ratings | p. 226 |
Structural Characteristics of a Performance Rating Scale | p. 227 |
Rating Formats | p. 228 |
Graphic Rating Scales | p. 228 |
Checklists | p. 229 |
Behavioral Rating | p. 231 |
Employee Comparison Methods | p. 232 |
A New Variation on the Paired Comparison Method: CARS | p. 233 |
Concluding Thoughts on Performance Rating Formats | p. 235 |
Performance Rating-Process | p. 236 |
Rating Sources | p. 236 |
Supervisors | p. 236 |
Peers | p. 237 |
Self-Ratings | p. 238 |
Subordinate Ratings | p. 239 |
Customer and Supplier Ratings | p. 240 |
360 Degree Systems | p. 240 |
Rating Distortions | p. 240 |
Central Tendency Error | p. 241 |
Leniency-Severity Error | p. 241 |
Halo Error | p. 241 |
Rater Training | p. 242 |
Administrative Training | p. 242 |
Psychometric Training | p. 242 |
Frame-of-Reference Training | p. 243 |
The Reliability and Validity of Ratings | p. 243 |
Reliability | p. 243 |
Validity | p. 243 |
The Social and Legal Context of Performance Evaluation | p. 245 |
The Motivation to Rate | p. 245 |
Goal Conflict | p. 247 |
Performance Feedback | p. 247 |
"Destructive" Criticism | p. 248 |
360 Degree Feedback | p. 250 |
Performance Evaluation and Culture | p. 252 |
Performance Evaluation and the Law | p. 253 |
Performance Evaluation and Protected Groups | p. 256 |
Staffing Decisions | p. 259 |
Conceptual Issues in Staffing | p. 260 |
An Introduction to the Staffing Process | p. 260 |
The Impact of Staffing Practices on Firm Performance | p. 261 |
Stakeholders in the Staffing Process | p. 262 |
Line Managers | p. 263 |
Co-workers | p. 263 |
Applicants | p. 263 |
Staffing from the International Perspective | p. 264 |
Evaluation of Staffing Outcomes | p. 267 |
Validity | p. 267 |
Selection Ratios | p. 268 |
Prediction Errors and Cut Scores | p. 268 |
Establishing Cut Scores | p. 270 |
Utility | p. 271 |
Til Death Us Do Part? The Concept Of Dynamic Validities | p. 272 |
Fairness | p. 272 |
Practical Issues in Staffing | p. 274 |
A Staffing Model | p. 274 |
Comprehensive Selection Systems | p. 274 |
Compensatory Selection Systems | p. 274 |
Combining Information | p. 275 |
Statistical versus Clinical Decision Making | p. 275 |
The Hurdle System of Combining Scores | p. 276 |
Combining Scores by Regression (The Compensatory Approach) | p. 277 |
Score Banding | p. 278 |
Subgroup Norming | p. 279 |
Selection versus Placement | p. 279 |
Deselection | p. 280 |
Number of Decisions to Be Made | p. 281 |
Large Staffing Projects | p. 281 |
Small Staffing Projects | p. 283 |
Legal Issues in Staffing Decisions | p. 285 |
Charges of Employment Discrimination | p. 285 |
Theories of Discrimination | p. 286 |
Intentional Discrimination or Adverse Treatment | p. 286 |
Unintentional Discrimination or Adverse Impact | p. 286 |
Training and Development | p. 292 |
Foundations of Training and Learning | p. 293 |
Training, Learning, and Performance | p. 294 |
Training Needs Analysis | p. 295 |
The Learning Process in Training | p. 297 |
Trainee Characteristics | p. 298 |
Learning and Motivational Theories Applied to Training | p. 299 |
Principles of Learning | p. 201 |
Learning Organizations | p. 304 |
Content and Methods of Training | p. 306 |
Training Methods | p. 306 |
On-Site Training Methods | p. 306 |
Off-Site Training Methods | p. 308 |
Distance Learning and Computer-Based Training | p. 309 |
Training "Critical Thinking" | p. 310 |
Transfer of Training | p. 311 |
Evaluating Training Programs | p. 314 |
Training Evaluation | p. 314 |
Training Criteria | p. 314 |
Utility Analysis | p. 316 |
Training Evaluation Designs | p. 317 |
Equal Employment Opportunity Issues in Training | p. 319 |
Specialized Training Programs | p. 321 |
Management and Leadership Development | p. 321 |
Assessment Centers | p. 321 |
360 Degree Feedback | p. 322 |
Coaching | p. 323 |
Informal Training | p. 323 |
Sexual Harassment Awareness Training | p. 325 |
Ethics Training | p. 326 |
Cross-Cultural Training | p. 327 |
Organizational Psychology | p. 331 |
The Motivation to Work | p. 332 |
An Introduction to Motivation | p. 333 |
The Central Position of Motivation in Psychology | p. 333 |
A Brief History of Motivation Theory in I-O Psychology | p. 334 |
Metaphors for Motivation | p. 335 |
Person as Machine | p. 335 |
Person as Godlike | p. 336 |
The Meaning and Importance of Motivation in the Workplace | p. 337 |
Motivation and Performance | p. 337 |
Motivation and Work-Life Balance | p. 338 |
Motivation and Attitudes | p. 338 |
Motivation and Personality | p. 339 |
Motivational Theories-Classic Approaches | p. 341 |
"Person-as-Machine" Theories | p. 341 |
An Internal Mechanical Theory: Maslow's Need Theory | p. 341 |
An External Mechanical Theory: Reinforcement Theory | p. 344 |
"Person-as-Godlike" Theories: The Scientist Model | p. 344 |
Vroom's VIE Theory | p. 345 |
Equity Theory | p. 347 |
Modern Approaches to Work Motivation | p. 350 |
Person-as-Intentional | p. 350 |
Goal Setting Theory | p. 350 |
Control Theories and the Concept of Self-Regulation | p. 354 |
The Concept of Self-Efficacy in Modern Motivation Theory | p. 355 |
Action Theory | p. 358 |
Common Theories in Modern Approaches | p. 360 |
A New Motivational Topic: The Entrepreneur | p. 360 |
Practical Issues in Motivation | p. 364 |
Can Motivation Be Measured? | p. 364 |
Cross-Cultural Issues in Motivation | p. 364 |
Generational Differences and Work Motivation | p. 367 |
Motivational Interventions | p. 369 |
Contingent Rewards | p. 369 |
Job Enrichment | p. 370 |
ProMES | p. 371 |
Attitudes, Emotions, and Work | p. 376 |
Job Satisfaction | p. 377 |
The Experience of Emotion at Work | p. 377 |
Job Satisfaction: Some History | p. 378 |
The Early Period of Job Satisfaction Research | p. 37 |
An Evolution | p. 380 |
Antecedents and Consequences of Job Satisfaction | p. 381 |
The Measurement of Job Satisfaction | p. 384 |
Overall versus Facet Satisfaction | p. 384 |
Satisfaction Questionnaires | p. 386 |
Moods, Emotions, Attitudes, and Behavior | p. 390 |
Is Everybody Happy? Does It Matter If They Are? | p. 390 |
The Concept of "Resigned" Work Satisfaction | p. 390 |
Satisfaction versus Mood versus Emotion | p. 393 |
Dispositions and Affectivity | p. 395 |
The Time Course of Emotional Experience | p. 396 |
Genetics and Job Satisfaction | p. 397 |
The Concept of Core Evaluations | p. 398 |
The Concept of Commitment | p. 400 |
Forms of Commitment | p. 400 |
Individual Difference Variables and Commitment | p. 401 |
A New Focus: Organizational Identification | p. 403 |
Withdrawal Behaviors | p. 405 |
Related Topics | p. 408 |
Job Loss | p. 408 |
Telecommuting | p. 410 |
Work-Family Balance | p. 412 |
Work-Related Attitudes and Emotions from the Cross-Cultural Perspective | p. 414 |
A Possible Connection between Motivation and Emotion | p. 415 |
Stress and Worker Well-Being | p. 418 |
The Problem of Stress | p. 419 |
Studying Workplace Stress | p. 419 |
What Is a Stressor? | p. 421 |
Common Stressors at Work | p. 422 |
Physical/Task Stressors | p. 422 |
Psychological Stressors | p. 422 |
Consequences of Stress | p. 426 |
Behavioral Consequences of Stress | p. 426 |
Psychological Consequences of Stress | p. 428 |
Physiological Consequences of Stress | p. 429 |
Work Schedules | p. 430 |
Shift Work | p. 430 |
Flexible and Compressed Workweek Schedules | p. 432 |
Theories of Stress | p. 435 |
Demand-Control Model | p. 435 |
Person-Environment Fit Model | p. 436 |
Individual Differences in Resistance to Stress | p. 437 |
The Type A Behavior Pattern | p. 438 |
Reducing and Managing Stress | p. 442 |
Primary Prevention Strategies | p. 442 |
Work and Job Design | p. 442 |
Cognitive Restructuring | p. 444 |
Secondary Prevention Strategies | p. 444 |
Stress Management Training | p. 444 |
Relaxation and Biofeedback Techniques | p. 445 |
Social Support | p. 445 |
Tertiary Prevention Strategies | p. 446 |
Summary of Stress Intervention Strategies | p. 447 |
Future Work Trends and Challenges to Stress and Stress Management | p. 448 |
Violence at Work | p. 450 |
Stress and Workplace Violence | p. 451 |
Levels of Violence | p. 451 |
The Experiential Sequence of Violence | p. 452 |
The "Typical" Violent Worker | p. 452 |
Theories of Workplace Violence | p. 453 |
Frustration-Aggression Hypothesis | p. 453 |
The "Justice" Hypothesis | p. 455 |
A Special Type of Violence: Bullying | p. 457 |
What Can We Conclude about Workplace Violence? | p. 459 |
Fairness and Diversity in the Workplace | p. 461 |
Fairness | p. 462 |
The Concept of Justice | p. 462 |
Justice, Fairness, and Trust | p. 464 |
Approaches to Organizational Justice | p. 466 |
Distributive Justice | p. 466 |
Procedural Justice | p. 468 |
Interactional Justice | p. 470 |
Deontic Justice | p. 471 |
Justice versus Injustice | p. 471 |
The Practical Implications of Justice Perceptions | p. 473 |
Performance Evaluation | p. 474 |
Applicant Perceptions of Selection Fairness | p. 475 |
A Special Case of Applicant Reactions: Stereotype Threat | p. 477 |
A Model of Applicant Decision Making | p. 479 |
The Rejected Applicant | p. 480 |
The Special Case of Affirmative Action | p. 481 |
Culture and Affirmative Action Programs | p. 484 |
Diversity | p. 487 |
What Does Diversity Mean? | p. 487 |
The Dynamics of Diversity | p. 488 |
Diversity from the Work Group Perspective | p. 489 |
Managing Diversity from the Organizational Perspective | p. 491 |
Leadership and Diversity | p. 492 |
Leadership | p. 494 |
The Concept of Leadership | p. 495 |
Some Conceptual Distinctions | p. 495 |
Leader Emergence versus Leader Effectiveness | p. 495 |
Leader Emergence | p. 495 |
The Problem of Defining Leadership Outcomes | p. 496 |
Leader versus Manager or Supervisor | p. 497 |
The Blending of Managerial and Leadership Roles | p. 498 |
Leader Development versus Leadership Development | p. 500 |
The Motivation to Lead | p. 501 |
Traditional Theories of Leadership | p. 504 |
The Great Man and Great Woman Theories | p. 504 |
The Trait Approach | p. 505 |
The "Power" Approach to Leadership | p. 506 |
The Behavioral Approach | p. 506 |
The Ohio State University Studies | p. 506 |
The University of Michigan Studies | p. 509 |
The Contingency Approach | p. 509 |
Hersey and Blanchard's Situational Theory | p. 510 |
House's Path-Goal Theory | p. 510 |
The Case of Social Undermining: What about the "Fickle" Leader? | p. 511 |
The Consequences of Participation: The Vroom-Yetton Model | p. 512 |
New Approaches to Leadership | p. 518 |
Leader-Member Exchange (LMX) | p. 518 |
Transformational Leadership | p. 519 |
The Charismatic Leader | p. 523 |
Emerging Topics and Challenges in Leadership Research | p. 526 |
Leadership in a Changing Workplace | p. 526 |
Male and Female Leaders: Are They Different? | p. 528 |
The Demographics of Leadership | p. 528 |
The Leadership Styles of Men and Women | p. 529 |
Personality and Leadership | p. 530 |
Cross-Cultural Studies of Leadership | p. 532 |
Leadership in a Diverse Environment | p. 534 |
Guidelines for Effective Leadership | p. 538 |
Teams in Organizations | p. 540 |
Types of Teams | p. 541 |
Groups and Teams: Definitions | p. 542 |
Types of Teams | p. 542 |
Quality Circles | p. 542 |
Project Teams | p. 543 |
Production Teams | p. 544 |
Virtual Teams | p. 546 |
A Model of Team Effectiveness | p. 550 |
Input-Process-Output Model of Team Effectiveness | p. 550 |
Team Inputs | p. 550 |
Team Processes | p. 556 |
Team Outputs | p. 560 |
Special Issues in Teams | p. 562 |
Team Appraisal and Feedback | p. 562 |
ProMES | p. 563 |
Team Roles | p. 563 |
Team Development | p. 565 |
Team Training | p. 566 |
Cultural Issues in Teams | p. 567 |
The Organization of Work Behavior | p. 570 |
The Conceptual and Theoretical Foundations of Organizations | p. 571 |
Organizations and People | p. 571 |
Organization as Integration | p. 574 |
Theories of Organization | p. 575 |
Classic Organizational Theory | p. 575 |
Human Relations Theory | p. 576 |
Contingency Theories | p. 579 |
Systems Theory | p. 580 |
Two Recent Approaches | p. 584 |
Conclusions about Theories of Organizations | p. 585 |
Some Social Dynamics of Organizations | p. 587 |
Climate and Culture | p. 587 |
A Brief History of Climate | p. 588 |
An Even Briefer History of Culture | p. 590 |
An Integration of Concepts | p. 590 |
A New Avenue for Exploration: Climate and Culture Strength | p. 593 |
Organizational Climate and Culture from the Multicultural Perspective | p. 595 |
When Cultures Clash | p. 595 |
An Application of Culture and Climate: Safety | p. 596 |
The Role of Leaders in Safety | p. 597 |
Safety Climate and Culture | p. 597 |
Unions and Organizational Behavior | p. 599 |
Socialization and the Concept of Person-Organization (P-O) Fit | p. 601 |
Organizational Socialization | p. 601 |
Socialization from the International Perspective | p. 607 |
Organizational Development and Change | p. 609 |
Organizational Change | p. 609 |
Episodic Change | p. 610 |
Continuous Change | p. 611 |
Resistance to Change | p. 613 |
Examples of Large-Scale Organizational Change Initiatives | p. 614 |
Management By Objectives (MBO) | p. 614 |
Matrix Organizations | p. 614 |
Total Quality Management (TQM) | p. 615 |
Six Sigma Systems | p. 617 |
Lean Production Manufacturing | p. 617 |
Mergers and Acquisitions | p. 619 |
Emerging Commonalities among Organizational Interventions | p. 619 |
Organizational Development | p. 620 |
Examples of OD Techniques | p. 621 |
Glossary | p. G-1 |
References | p. R-1 |
Credits | p. C-1 |
Name Index | p. I-1 |
Subject Index | p. I-12 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.