Evaluating the Hawthorne study
Title: Evaluating the Hawthorne study
Category: /Business & Economy
Details: Words: 783 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
Evaluating the Hawthorne study
Category: /Business & Economy
Details: Words: 783 | Pages: 3 (approximately 235 words/page)
Theories of motivation to work have passed through many stages, influencing and being influenced by the prevailing management ideologies and philosophies of each era. Although we can trace a sequence to this development, it does not mean that the old theories have died. There are employers and managers and employees today adhering vigorously to one or other of them, basing their belief not on research or empirical evidence but on an almost ideological framework of
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employees. One over-simplistic view of human motivation was replaced by another equally simplistic theory. Thousands of managers were sent on training courses to learn the skills of "relating" to their employees, understanding employee problems and showing concern.
Motivation theories were developed which under-pinned or built upon the "human relations" findings. The new focus for motivation theory was on the search for satisfaction of human needs. This new approach swept through management thinking in the 1950's.