Author Question: What is a psychological contract? What are the determinants of a psychological contract? What ... (Read 58 times)

NguyenJ

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What is a psychological contract? What are the determinants of a psychological contract?
 
  What will be an ideal response?

Question 2

As a management trainee, you have had a chance to observe many supervisors. One of them, Bob Smith, is particularly fascinating to you. Bob is a retired U.S. Army tank commander.
 
  He tends to see every challenge to his authority as an enemy attack and every task as a military campaign. Bob also tends to let whomever he likes personally heavily influence who gets promotions and bonuses in his area, although he sees this as rewarding the worker's exceptional performance. Bob also believes his workers are all saints when he is in a good frame of mind and all bums when he is not. Use what you have learned about perceivers and perception to explain Bob's actions and tendencies.
  What will be an ideal response?



KKcool

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Answer to Question 1

A psychological contract is an employee's perception of his or her exchange relationships with an organization: outcomes the organization has promised to provide, and contributions he or she is obligated to make. The determinants of psychological contracts are direct communication from coworkers and supervisors, observations of what actually transpires in the organization, and written documents.

Answer to Question 2

Perceptions can be influenced by the perceiver's schemas, motivational states, and moods. A schema is an abstract knowledge structure that allows information about a given target to be organized and interpreted. Schemas are based on experience and knowledge, and in Bob's case, his military experience may cause him to see the workplace as a battlefield with enemies and campaigns.

Motivational states are the perceiver's needs, values, and desires at the time of their perception and can influence subjective decisions. Bob's high rating of those employees he likes suggests his motivational state may be influencing those decisions.

Mood, how a perceiver feels at the time of perception, can also influence how the perceiver views the target. A worker in a positive mood is more likely to see coworkers in a positive light than when in a negative mood. Bob's perceptions of his workers as saints and bums seem to be dependent on Bob's mood.



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