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Organization
Development MGMT
628
VU
Lesson
08
Action
Research Model
The
action research model focuses on planned
change as a cyclical process in
which initial research
about
the
organization provides information to guide
subsequent action. Then the results of
the action are
assessed
to provide further information to
guide further action, and so
on. This iterative (iterate
means to
repeat)
cycle of research and action
involves considerable collaboration
among organization members
and
OD
practitioners. It places heavy emphasis
on data gathering and diagnosis
prior to action planning
and
implementation,
as well as careful evaluation of results
after action is taken.
Action
research is traditionally aimed
both at helping specific
organizations to implement planned
change
and
at developing more general knowledge
that can be applied to other
change and settings.
Although
action
research was originally developed to
have this dual focus on knowledge, it has
been adapted to OD
efforts
in which the major emphasis is on planned
change. Figure 2.1 (B) shows
the cyclical phases of
planned
change as defined by the original
research method. The main steps
involved are:
1.
Entry (Problem identification):
This
stage usually begins when a
key executive in the organization
or
someone
with power and influence senses
that the organization has one or
more problems that might
be
solved
with the help of an OD practitioner.
Contact between the consultant and client
is what initiates the
entry
phase. After the contact, the consultant
and the client begin the process of
exploring with one
another
the possibilities of a working relationship. During
this process, the consultant
assesses:
a.
The
probability of relating with the
client
b.
The
motivation and values of the
client
c.
The
client's readiness for
change
d.
The
extent of resources available
e.
Potential
leverage points of
change
2.
Contracting (Consultation with a behavioral
science expert): During
the initial contact, the OD
practitioner
and the client carefully assess
each other. The practitioner
has his or her own
normative,
developmental
theory or frame of reference
and must be conscious of
those assumptions and
values.
Sharing
them with the client from the
beginning establishes an open and
collaborative atmosphere.
Unlike
other types of contracts,
the OD contract states three
critical areas:
a.
What
each expects to get from the
relationship
b.
How
much time each will invest,
when, and at what
cost
c.
The
ground rules under which the
parties will operate
3.
Diagnosis (Data gathering and preliminary
diagnosis): This
step is usually completed by the
OD
practitioner,
often in conjunction with organization
members. It involves gathering appropriate
information
and
analyzing it to determine the underlying
causes of organizational problems. The
four basic methods of
gathering
data are interviews, process observation,
questionnaires, and organizational
performance data
(unfortunately,
often overlooked). One approach to
diagnosis begins with observation,
proceeds to a semi
structured
interview, and concludes
with a questionnaire to measure
precisely the problems identified
by
the
earlier steps. When gathering
diagnostic information, OD practitioners
may influence members
from
whom
they are collecting data. In OD, "every
action on the part of the consultant constitutes
an
intervention"
that will have some effect
on the organization.
4.
Feedback (Feedback to a key client or group):
Because
action research is a collaborative activity,
the
diagnostic
data are fed back to the
client, usually in a group or work-team
meeting. The feedback step,
in
which
members are given the information
gathered by the OD practitioner, helps
them determine the
strengths
and weaknesses of the organization or the department
under study. The consultant provides the
client
with all relevant and useful
data. Obviously, the practitioner
will protect confidential
sources of
information
and, at times, may even
withhold data. Defining what is relevant
and useful involves
consideration
of privacy and ethics as well as judgment
about whether the group is ready for the
in-
formation
or if the information would make the
client overly
defensive.
At
this point, members discuss the
feedback and explore with the OD
practitioner whether they want to
work
on identified problems. A close
interrelationship exists among
data gathering, feedback,
and diagnosis
because
the consultant summarizes the basic data
from the client members and
presents the data to them
for
validation and further
diagnosis. An important point to
remember is that the action research
process is
very
different from the doctor-patient model,
in which the consultant comes in,
makes a diagnosis.
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Organization
Development MGMT
628
VU
may
find that most companies
have drawers full of reports by
consultants, each loaded
with diagnoses and
recommendations
which are either not understood or
not accepted by the
'patient'.
A
feedback session generally
has three steps.
First:
the consultant
provides a summary of the data collected
and some preliminary
analysis.
Next:
there
is a general discussion in which
questions of clarification are
raised and answered.
Finally:
some
time is devoted to interpretation. At this stage
some changes may be made in
the
consultant's
analysis and
interpretation.
Thus,
the consultant works collaboratively with the client
to arrive at a final diagnosis that
accurately
describes
the current state of the system.
Case
Example:
An
OD practitioner conducted interviews with
the senior management group. He asked
four general
questions;
1.
What are the
strengths?
2.
What are the
weaknesses?
3.
Are you in favor of the
off-site meeting?
4.
What should be the objective of the off-site
meeting?
1.
What are the
strengths?
Senior
management is highly experienced in
business (7)
Commitment of
work force (5)
Good
people throughout (3)
Last
four years we experienced
success in many areas
(3)
Technological
superior & a market leader
(3)
Creativity
(2)
Managers
think entrepreneurially (2)
2.
What are the
weaknesses?
Marketing
& Servicing System
(6)
Do
not establish priorities
(3)
Organizational
priorities are always
secondary to individual managers
(3)
Lack
of management depth
(3)
Little
planning (3)
Structure
(2)
High
Costs (2)
Overly
change-oriented (2)
Poor
reward system (2)
Low
morale (2)
Internal
competition (2)
High
degree of mistrust
(2)
3.
What should be the objective
of the off-site
meeting?
Agree on the
regional structure (7)
Set
financial objectives for next
two years (6)
List
of things we need to do & stop doing
(4)
Must
hear from the GM about his
team notions, ideas,
expectations (4)
Some
ventilation of feelings needed
(3)
Must
come together more as a top
management team (3)
Establish
standards for performance
(3)
Increase
mutual respect (2)
5.
Planning Change (Joint action
planning): Next,
the OD practitioner and the client
members jointly
agree
on further actions to be taken.
This is the beginning of the moving
process (described in
Lewin's
change
model), as the organization decides how
best to reach a different
quasi-stationary equilibrium. At
this
stage, the specific action to be taken
depends on the culture, technology, and
environment of the
organization;
the diagnosis of the problem; and the time
and expense of the intervention.
Once the
diagnosis
is understood and deemed accurate, action
steps are planned.
Good
diagnosis determines the intervention.
The purposes of this planning
phase are to generate
alternative
steps for responding correctively to the
problems identified in the diagnosis,
and to decide on
the
step or order of steps to
take.
Organization
Development MGMT
628
VU
6.
Intervention (Action): This
stage involves the actual
change from one organizational
state to another.
It
may include installing new methods
and procedures, reorganizing structures
and work designs,
and
reinforcing
new behaviors. Such actions
typically cannot be implemented immediately but
require a
transition
period as the organization moves from the
present to a desired future
state.
Examples
of interventions at the individual level
are: job redesign and
enrichment, training and
management
development, changes in the quality of
working life, management by
objectives, and
career
development.
Examples of interventions at the group
level are: team building, the
installation of
autonomous
work groups or quality
control circles.
7.
Evaluation (Data gathering after
action): Because
action research is a cyclical process,
data must also
be
gathered after the action has been
taken to measure and
determine the effects of the action and
to feed
the
results back to the organization. This, in
turn, may lead to
re-diagnosis and new
action.
Termination
of the OD Effort:
An
organization has a constant need
for periodic, objective diagnostic
check-ups by external consultants
a
need
that exists, incidentally, whether or
not the organization's managers see
it.
Termination
is not an applicable phase
for internal OD practitioners. Although
they may conclude
specific
programs
and projects with their
clients, they should not terminate the relationship. A
primary role of
internal
practitioners is to serve as guardians of the
new culture. They may help
to regulate the social
change
that has become a new
routine in organizational life.
When
OD practitioners follow the action research model,
they generate new data for
further diagnosis and
action.
The process is cyclical, and
since an organization is both dynamic
and naturally follows the
entropic
process,
there is always a great deal
of consultative work to be done.
Phases
not Steps:
Phases
are a more appropriate term than
steps for describing the
flow of events in OD work.
Steps imply
discrete
actions, while phases connote a
cycle of changes. Although it is
useful for our understanding
of
OD
practice to conceive of distinct phases,
in actual practice they blend, overlap,
and do not follow
one
from
the other. Diagnosis, for
example, comes early in the OD
process and intervention later,
but when
one
is collecting information from the organization
for diagnostic purposes, an
intervention is occurring
simultaneously;
when the OD practitioner begins to ask
questions about the organization and
its members,
he
or she is intervening.
Phases
are an appropriate term also because of
the cyclical nature of the OD process. As
the process
continues,
new or undisclosed data are
discovered. These data affect
organization members, and the
members
react, creating additional
information for diagnosis.
Further action is then planned as
a
consequence
of the new, perhaps more refined
diagnosis.
Contemporary
Adaptations of Action
Research:
The
action research model underlies most
current approaches to planned change and
is often identified
with
the practice of OD. Recently, action
research has been extended
to new settings and
applications, and
consequently
researchers and practitioners have
made requisite adaptations of
its basic framework.
Trends
in the application of action research include movement
from smaller subunits of
organizations to
total
systems and communities. In
those larger contexts, action
research is more complex and
political than
in
smaller settings. Therefore, the action
research cycle is coordinated across
multiple change processes
and
includes
a diversity of stakeholders who have an
interest in the organization.
Action
research also is applied increasingly in
international settings, particularly in developing
nations in the
southern
hemisphere. Embedded within the action
research model, however, are
"northern-hemisphere"
assumptions
about change. For example, action
research traditionally views
change more linearly than
do
Eastern
cultures, and it treats the
change process more
collaboratively than do Latin American
and African
countries.
To achieve success in those
settings, action research is tailored to
fit cultural assumptions.
Finally,
action research is applied increasingly to
promote social change and
innovation, as demonstrated
most
clearly in community development and global
social change projects.
Those applications are heavily
value
laden and seek to redress
imbalances in power and resource
allocations across different
groups.
Action
researchers tend to play an activist role
in the change process, which is
often chaotic and
confliction.
In
light of these general
trends, action research has undergone
two key adaptations. First,
contemporary
applications
have increased substantially the
degree of member involvement in the
change process. That
contrasts
with traditional approaches to planned
change, whereby consultants
carried out most of
the
change
activities, with the agreement
and collaboration of management.
Although consultant-dominated
change
still persists in OD, there
is a growing tendency to involve
organization members in learning
about
their
organization and about how to
change it. Referred to as
"participatory action research,"
"action
Organization
Development MGMT
628
VU
learning,"
"action science," "self-design
"or" appreciative inquiry," this
approach to plan change
emphasizes
the
need for organization members to
learn firsthand about planned change if
they are to gain the
knowledge
and skills needed to change
the organization. In today's complex and
changing environment,
some
argue that OD must go beyond solving
particular problems to helping members
gain the competence
needed
to change and improve the organization
continually.
In
this modification of action research, the
role of OD consultants is to work
with members to facilitate the
learning
process. Both parties are
"co-learners" in diagnosing the organization,
designing changes,
and
implementing
and assessing them. Neither
party dominates the change process.
Rather, each
participant
brings
unique information and expertise to the
situation, and they combine their
resources to learn how
to
change
the organization. Consultants, for
example, know how to design
diagnostic instruments and
OD
interventions,
and organization members have
local knowledge about the organization and
how it
functions.
Each participant learns from
the change process. Organization members
learn how to change
their
organization and how to refine
and improve it. OD
consultants learn how to facilitate
complex
organizational
change and learning.
The
second adaptation to action research is the
integration of an "interpretive or
"social constructionist"
approach
to planned change. Called "appreciative
inquiry," this model proposes that
words and
conversations
determine what is important and
meaningful in organizational life. Take,
for example, the
work
group whose daily
conversations are dominated by management
feedback that its costs
are too high.
Even
if the group performs well on quality
and customer satisfaction, the
focus on cost problems can
lead
group
members to believe that the
group is a poor performer.
Accordingly, this approach to
change
involves
starting new conversations that
drive new shared meanings of
key goals, processes, and
achieve-
ments.
Proponents of appreciative inquiry point
out that most organizational
conversations are focused
on
poor
financial results or on how the
organization could be better, on the gap
between where the
organization
is and where it wants to be,
and on the problems it faces.
Metaphorically, organizations
are
like
problems to be solved and the
conversations among members
dwell on the organization's
faults.
Appreciative
inquiry challenges that
assumption. It suggests that the
most important change
an
organization
can make is to begin conversations about
what the organization is doing right.
Appreciative
inquiry
helps organization members to understand
and describe their organization when it
is working at its
best.
That knowledge is then applied to
creating a powerful and
guiding image of what the
organization
could
be. Broad involvement of organization
members in creating the vision
starts a new conversation
about
the organization's potential and
creates a new focus and
positive expectation. Considerable
research
on
expectation effects supports this
positive approach to planned change. It
suggests that people tend
to
act
in ways that make their
expectations occur: a positive
vision of the organization's future
energizes and
directs
behavior to make that expectation
come about.
Planned
change emphasizes member
involvement and starts with
which organization features to
examine.
For
example, members can choose
to look for successful
male-female collaboration (as
opposed to sexual
discrimination),
instances of customer satisfaction
(as opposed to customer
dissatisfaction), particularly
effective
work teams, or product development
processes that brought new
ideas to market especially
fast. If
the
focus of inquiry is real and
vital to organization members, the change
process itself will take on
these
positive
attributes. The second step
involves gathering data about the "best
of what is" in the organization.
A
broad array of organization members is
involved in developing data-gathering
instruments, collecting
information,
and analyzing it. In the
third step, members examine
the data to find stories, however
small,
that
present a truly exciting and
possible picture of the future. From
those stories, members
develop
"possibility
propositions"--statements that bridge the
organization's current best practices
with ideal
possibilities
for future organizing. That
effort redirects attention
from "what is" to "what
might be." In step
four,
relevant stakeholders are brought
together to construct a vision of the
future and to devise
action
plans
for moving in that
direction. The vision
becomes a statement of "what should
be." Finally,
implementation
of those plans proceeds similarly to the
action and assessment phases of action
research
described
previously. Members make
changes, assess the results,
and make necessary
adjustments, and so
on
as they move the organization toward the
vision.
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