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Understanding Organizations

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Understanding Organizations
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Understanding Organizations/Agencies
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Page 1: Understanding Organizations

Understanding Organizations/Agencies

Page 2: Understanding Organizations

What is an organization?

Page 3: Understanding Organizations

- A social group formally created to achieve specific goals.

- An organization has specific characteristics.

- Deliberate action was taken to form the organization to deal with something in the environment.

- A written document describes the general purposes and activities of the organization.

- A structure of governing the organization is created which outlines of authority and work conducted.

- The group is legally sanctioned through articles of incorporation to perform certain tasks in the community.

Page 4: Understanding Organizations

Why should social workers be concerned about organizations?

Page 5: Understanding Organizations

• Most social workers will work within the confines of a formal organization.

• This organization or agency will have a tremendous impact on how they deliver services to their client and who that client will be.

• The formal organization is an extremely powerful tool that can bring about change or maintain the status.

• Many micro social work practitioners (counselors, clinicians and therapists) will become managers and need to know the dynamics of agencies.

Page 6: Understanding Organizations

Types of Organizations• Public (government agencies established to serve

people in need).• Nonprofit organizations (private organizations given

special tax status that allows them to spend their funds for public purposes without being taxed on the money they receive).

• For-profit organizations (private business that charge individuals or government agencies for their services).

• Self-help groups or mutual aid societies. Founded by a group of people with similar problems to provide help and support to members of the group.

• Most self-help groups are either nonprofit organizations or what we call informal organizations.

Page 7: Understanding Organizations

Organizations can be formal or informal

• Formal organizations have a definite structure and a decision-making process. It’s easy to tell who is and who is not a member of a formal organization.

• An informal organization can just be a group of people with similar interest or needs who come together to solve a problem (a block club, neighbors who exchange child care, volunteers who maintain a food pantry, etc.). It is sometimes difficult to tell who is and who is not a member of the organization. There may not be a definite leader or a process for making decisions. Informal organizations are not nonprofit organizations but may apply to state and federal governments to become one.

Page 8: Understanding Organizations

Several tools help us understand agencies.

Social Systems Model

Mechanical modelHuman Relations Model

Decision-making ModelParson’s Paradigm

Page 9: Understanding Organizations

Organizations function to serve people in need and to maintain their own resources.

• Organizations must raise funds and obtain resources from a variety of sources (individual donors, government grants or contracts, foundations, and businesses, or charge fees for their services).

• They can only provide services if they have money to do so.

• Consequently, they can may limit the number of people they serve or ration services.

Page 10: Understanding Organizations

Organizations must also interact with other systems (economic, social, political) and

organizations in order to survive.• They need money.• They need clients.• They need to establish a positive reputation• They need good workers.• They need resources and methods to deliver

services.• They need to be responsible to licensing and

accreditation agencies.• They need to be responsive to the public.

Page 11: Understanding Organizations

One way of Understanding Public and Nonprofit Organizations

involves the Social Systems Model• Boundary• Suprasystem• Interface• Input• Output• Proposed Output• Conversion Operations• Feedback

Page 12: Understanding Organizations

What is a boundary and how can you tell one in an

organization?

Agency 1

Agency 2

Page 13: Understanding Organizations

Boundary

• The boundary controls the internal and external exchanges with the environment.

• A Boundary must be closed enough to keep the integrity of a system yet open enough to allow a flow back and forth between the system and the environment.

• Boundaries are not physical.• The boundary of an organization or agency is

its culture.

Page 14: Understanding Organizations

What to look for in an agency boundary.

• Who are the workers? • What is their education and skills? How do they

dress?• Who are the clients? Are they rich or poor?

What is their ethnic background?• What service population is stipulated in the

mission statement?• What is the feel when you walk into the agency?

Are you welcome? Are you confined?

Page 15: Understanding Organizations

Suprasystem

• The social environment of the agency made up of individuals, groups, other agencies and communities.

Page 16: Understanding Organizations

What should you look for to determine an agency’s suprasystem?

• Where does the agency get its money?• Where does your agency get its clients?• What other agencies or businesses does the

agency contract with?• What communities and government agencies

have connections to the agency including grants and contracts?

• Where is the agency located?

Page 17: Understanding Organizations

Interface

• The boundary shared with another organization or agency that is a part of the suprasystem of the agency.

• The interface is the relationship between the agency and other organizations in the suprasystem.

• This relationship is jointly maintained by both agencies.

Page 18: Understanding Organizations

What should you look for in determining an agencies interface?

• What are the organizations connected to the agency? MOU

• What is the nature of their relationship? Is formal and contractual? Is it informal with no contract?

• Who funds the agency?

Page 19: Understanding Organizations

Input

• All the incoming individuals and resources needed to provide services and run the agency.

Page 20: Understanding Organizations

How can you determine the input in an agency?

• Who are the clients in the agency?• Who are the workers in the agency?

Page 21: Understanding Organizations

What is proposed output and how can you find it in the agency?

Proposed Output

Page 22: Understanding Organizations

Proposed Output

• The purpose or goals of the agency.• Simply put, what the agency says it is

going to do.

Page 23: Understanding Organizations

Where can you find proposed output in the agency?

• What is the mission statement of the agency?

• What are its goals and objectives?• What does it say it’s going to do in its

various grants and public pronouncements?

Mission Statement

Page 24: Understanding Organizations

Output

• The input after it goes through conversion operations.

Page 25: Understanding Organizations

Where is the output of the agency?

• What happens to the client when he/she has finished treatment, case management, counseling, education, etc.? JOB ASSURANCE

• What happens to the human services worker after working in the agency?

Monetary Benefits

Page 26: Understanding Organizations

What is conversion operations and where can you find it in the

agency?

Page 27: Understanding Organizations

Conversion Operations

• The process where the agency turns its inputs into outputs.

Page 28: Understanding Organizations

Where can you find conversion operations in the agency?

• What practice modalities are used in the agency?– case management– psychotherapy– counseling– teaching– medical treatment

Page 29: Understanding Organizations

Feedback

• Determining if the agency is doing what it said that it was going to do.

Page 30: Understanding Organizations

Where can you find it in the agency?

• Does the agency do annual program evaluations?

• Does the agency do needs assessments in the community?

• What kind of information system does the agency utilize to determine completion of objectives?

Page 31: Understanding Organizations

Mechanical Model

• The authority structure is hierarchical in nature.

• There is a definite chain of command from the top to the bottom.

Page 32: Understanding Organizations

An organizational hierarchy may look like this (typical nonprofit structure):

Board of Directors

Executive Director

Supervisor Supervisor

Staff MembersStaff Members

Page 33: Understanding Organizations

Where would clients be in this structure?

What effect do you think this has on clients?

Page 34: Understanding Organizations

• Workers are selected based upon their qualifications.• A given task is divided into parts and assigned to

positions. What is this called?• Roles within the job or position are standardized.

What does this mean?• Each position has a fixed salary and salary increase

is based upon steps. How does that differ with other models?

• Promotion is based on seniority. What is that mean?• Conduct within the agency is strictly regulated.

Page 35: Understanding Organizations

What are some advantages to a bureaucracy?

Page 36: Understanding Organizations

Advantages

• Works well with agencies involved in a specific task.

• Allows quick decisions. Why? Timeliness• Workers know their place in the agency

without question.• There is little ambiguity in communication.

What does that mean? - Hierarchy

Page 37: Understanding Organizations

What are some disadvantages to a bureaucracy or the

mechanical model?

Page 38: Understanding Organizations

• Does not allow the flexibility to respond to a turbulent outside environment. What does that mean? Integrity

• Rigidity makes it difficult to deal with complex tasks. What does that mean? - Flexibility

• The non-personal nature of interaction increases low morale.

• Feeling powerless in policy changes increases low morale. Why? – Communication Gap

Page 39: Understanding Organizations

Human Relations Model• Is founded on the principal that the behavior and

interaction of people within an agency directly impacts the quality and quantity of work produced. What does that mean? – Clarification of Doubts

• Workers directly participate in organizational decisions and policy development. Why is that important? - Involvement

• Leadership is democratic.• Communication is free and open.• Workers needs are a concern of the agency as

well as client’s needs.

Page 40: Understanding Organizations

Advantages

• Workers have a higher morale.• Workers have an increased loyalty to the

agency and agency goals. Why? – Feel as a ownership

• The positive ambiance of the agency is translated to the client.

• Creativity and problem solving are increased in the work performed by the professionals in the agency.

Page 41: Understanding Organizations

Disadvantages

• Some research indicates that although the human relations model increases worker satisfaction, it does little to increase agency effectiveness, innovation or client treatment.

• The agency puts more energy into satisfying staff needs than satisfying client needs.

Page 42: Understanding Organizations

• The human relations model fosters increased political behavior in terms of decision-making. Why? – Critical Analysis

• The human relations model slows down the decision-making process thereby hindering cost effective and speedy service delivery.- Blocking

• The model tends to see all organizational problems as caused by lack of communication overlooking other factors including ineffective work, lack of resources and political/environmental barriers.

Page 43: Understanding Organizations

No agency is purely mechanical or purely human relations.

• Most agencies are a blend of the two models.

Pure Human Relations Pure Mechanical

Page 44: Understanding Organizations

Your analysis of where the agency is on the scale can tell

you a lot about the agency.

Page 45: Understanding Organizations

Parson’s Paradigm

Adaptation

Maintaining Uniqueness

Maintaining Workers

External

Internal

Fulfilling

Environmental

Goal

Page 46: Understanding Organizations

What happens if one box gets bigger?

Adaptation

Maintaining Uniqueness

Maintaining Workers

External

Internal

Fulfilling

Page 47: Understanding Organizations

Adaptation

Maintaining Uniqueness Maintaining

Workers

External

Internal

Fulfilling

Environmental

Goal

Page 48: Understanding Organizations

What should be the goal?

Adaptation

Maintaining Uniqueness

Maintaining Workers

External

Internal

Fulfilling

Environmental

Goal

Page 49: Understanding Organizations

Which box would be bigger in the Human Relations Model?

Adaptation

Maintaining Uniqueness

Maintaining Workers

External

Internal

Fulfilling

Environmental

Goal

Page 50: Understanding Organizations

Parson’s Paradigm

Adaptation

Maintaining Uniqueness

Maintaining Workers

External

Internal

Fulfilling

Page 51: Understanding Organizations

Which box is bigger in a bureaucracy?

Adaptation

Maintaining Uniqueness

Maintaining Workers

External

Internal

Fulfilling

Environmental

Goal

Page 52: Understanding Organizations

Parson’s Paradigm

Adaptation

Maintaining Uniqueness Maintaining

Workers

External

Internal

Fulfilling

Environmental

Goal

Page 53: Understanding Organizations

Simon’s Decision-Making Model

• To understand any agency, you need to know who is in control. Who has the power?

• The values of the people in control will filter down into the policy and the procedures of the worker and ultimately come to rest with the client or consumer.

• What are the values of the people who control the agency?

Page 54: Understanding Organizations

Two Tasks for Understanding an Agency’s Structure:

• Determine who is in control of the agency.

• Determine what are their values.

Page 55: Understanding Organizations

Empowerment Theory also helps us understand organizations

• What is the organization’s decision-making structure?

• How does the organization involve organization staff in decision-making?

• How does the organization involve clients in decision-making?

• Do staff members work collaboratively with clients to assess their problems and develop intervention plans?

Page 56: Understanding Organizations

What is empowerment?

Why do you think it’s important?• A management practice of sharing information, rewards, and power

 with employees so that they can take initiative and make decisions to solve problems and improve service and performance.

• Empowerment is based on the idea that giving employees skills, resources, authority, opportunity, motivation, as well holding them responsible and accountable for outcomes of their actions, will contribute to their competence and satisfaction.


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