Course Code: Ag Ex 332 Credit Hours: 2 Target Group: Mid Career Year II School: RDAI Academic Year: 2021/2022
Course Code: Ag Ex 332 Credit Hours: 2 Target Group: Mid Career Year II School: RDAI Academic Year: 2021/2022
Course Code: Ag Ex 332 Credit Hours: 2 Target Group: Mid Career Year II School: RDAI Academic Year: 2021/2022
Course
Course Code: Ag Ex 332
Credit Hours: 2
Target Group: Mid Career Year II
School: RDAI
Academic Year: 2021/2022
January 2022
Haramaya University, Haramaya
Psychology-Concept and Nature
• The term 'psychology', derived from two Greek words:
Psyche=soul or mind; logos=study.
= the study of mind
• Explaining behavior
• Predicting behavior
• Controlling behavior
• Cognitive processes
• Environmental factors
• Biological factors.
Actions and Characteristics of Others
Resistance to Persuasion
• Reactance
• Negative reaction threatens to one’s personal freedom.
Reactance often increases resistance to persuasion.
Forewarning
• It is outward conformity
• Social validation
• We are generally more willing to comply with a request for some
action if this action is consistent with what we believe persons
similar to ourselves doing for thinking.
• Authority
• we are more willing to comply with requests from someone who
holds legitimate authority – or who simply appears to do so.
Tactics based on Friendship or Liking: compliance
strategies
• Foot in the door Technique:
• start with small request, then gradually end up with larger
request
• A technique for gaining compliance in which requesters first
induce target persons to like them attempts to change their
behavior in some desired manner.
• Door in the face Technique:
• it is the reverse of foot in the door technique
• A procedure for gaining compliance in which requesters
begin with a large request and then, when this is refused,
retreat to a smaller one (the one they actually desired all
along).
Obedience
• Change in behavior due to order from
someone who is higher than you(i.e high status
or power)
• If our compliance is to an explicit command,
we call it obedience
• Obedience, respect to the norms and values of
the society you are working with and a down
to earth character will help the agent win the
hearts and minds of the intervention
subjects/the community.
Pro-social Behavior/Altruism
• Altruism- an unselfish concern for the welfare of others
• Pro-social-help for behavior
• aim to maximize one’s rewards and minimize one’s costs.
• Human beings exchange not only materials goods and
money but also social goods (love, services, information
and status).
• helping brings enormous internal rewards to the helper,
e.g helping reduces distress.
• gender, evolutionary perspectives, genuine altruism are
all influence the helping behavior of human beings.
Bystander effect
• An introvert is likely to enjoy time spent alone and find less reward
in time spent with large groups of people, though they may enjoy
interactions with close friends.
• They prefer to concentrate on a single activity at a time
• They are more analytical before speaking.
Ambiversion
• Types of aggression
• Instrumental aggression: is an aggression that person
engage to get something in return
• Hostile aggression: the object is to hurt that individual
exclusively
• There is no goal
• Spontaneous
Conflict
• Conflicts are natural in all walks of daily life – both
at workplace and home.
• Difference of opinion
• It is a conflict between convergent thinking (ability
to narrow the number of possible solutions to a
problem) and divergent thinking (thinking outwards
instead of inward).
• Status
• When there is a need for status and a “wrong”
person is promoted.
• Incongruence:
• A party is required to engage in an activity that is
incongruent with his or her needs or interests.
Causes of Conflicts….cntd
•Incompatibility
•A party holds behavioural preferences like attitudes, values,
skills, goals, and perceptions, the satisfaction of which is
incompatible with another person’s implementation of his or her
preferences.
•Stress
• Conflicts from stress from external sources; i.e., functional or
dysfunctional situations.
•Poor or inadequate organizational structure and lack of
teamwork.
•Seeking Power
•Often a conflict for power struggle takes place when everyone
wants to be a leader and nobody wants to be a follower.
Causes of Conflicts….cntd
•Weak Leadership
•Lack of transparency and openness creates dissatisfaction
among the affected people.
•Differing viewpoints among colleagues about each
other
• In case of joint action two parties may have partially
exclusive behavioural preferences.
•Managerial Actions
•Poor communication (employees being not informed of
new decisions, not involved in decision making, etc);
•insufficient resources;
•Rigidity and dislike between managers and employees
Conflict Management
1. Avoidance
• It is non-assertive and non-cooperative.
• The manager may think or pretend that no conflict exists or just ignore
it.
• A turtle is a symbol for avoidance, because it can avoid everything by
pulling its head and legs into the shell to be off to everything.
2. Accommodating
• Accommodating is non-assertive and cooperative,
• just opposite of competing.
• It is accepting other’s view point.
• A chameleon is a symbol of the accommodating style since it changes
its color to match the color of its environment.
• By changing its color to accommodate its surroundings, the
chameleon fits quietly into its environment.
3. Competing
4. Compromising
• It is some assertive and some cooperative.
• somewhere between competition and accommodation.
• It means mutual give-and-take to satisfy both parties
• A zebra can be a symbol for the compromising style.
• A zebra’s unique look seems to indicate that it didn’t care if it was a
black horse or a white horse, so it “split the difference” and chose
black and white stripes.
5. Collaborating
• Negotiation
• it usually costs less than other methods,
• it allows disputants to work out their own resolutions,
• leading to more satisfying and enforceable
settlements.
• Intergroup competition
• Attraction to group
• Group success
• Agreement on goals
• Mutual influence
Formal Manager has got formal rights in an Rights are not available to a
Rights organization because of his status. leader.
• Leadership Styles
• Authoritarian leaders, also known as autocratic
leaders,
• provide clear expectations for what needs to be done,
when it should be done, and how it should be done.
• There is also a clear division between the leader and
the followers.
1. Motivational factors :
• achievement, recognition, the work itself,
responsibility, advancement, and growth, which
produce job satisfaction
2. Hygiene factors:
• cause dissatisfaction if not present,
• but do not motivate workers to do more;
• examples include:
larger salaries,
more supervision, and
more attractive work environment
McGregor’s Theory X and Y