Edgar Schein

Edgar H. Schein
Born March 5, 1928
Zurich
Residence United States
Citizenship United States
Nationality North American
Fields Psychology
Institutions MIT Sloan School of Management
Alma mater Harvard University, Stanford University, University of Chicago
Known for coercive persuasion, organizational development, career development, group process consultation, organizational culture, corporate culture
Notable awards Lifetime Achievement Award in Workplace Learning and Performance of the American Society of Training Directors, 2000
Everett Cherrington Hughes Award for Career Scholarship, 2000
Marion Gislason Award for Leadership in Executive Development, from the BU School of Management Executive Development Roundtable, 2002, Life time achievement award as Scholar Practitioner, Academy of Management, 2009; Life time achievement award for Leadership, International Leadership Assoc., 2012; Honorary Doctorate, Bled School of Management, Slovenia, 2012.

Edgar Henry Schein (born March 5, 1928), a former professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, has made a notable mark on the field of organizational development in many areas, including career development, group process consultation, and organizational culture. He is the son of former University of Chicago professor Marcel Schein.

Schein's organizational culture model

Illustration of Schein's model of organizational culture

Schein's model of organizational culture originated in the 1980s. Schein (2004) identifies three distinct levels in organizational cultures:

  1. artifacts and behaviours
  2. espoused values
  3. assumptions

The three levels refer to the degree to which the different cultural phenomena are visible to the observer.

Schein's 'Career Anchors'

A career anchor is one's self-concept, and consists of one's perceptions of one's talents and abilities, one's basic values and one's perceptions of motives and needs as they pertain to career.

In Schein's original research from the mid-1970s he identified five possible career anchor constructs: (1) autonomy/independence, (2) security/stability, (3) technical-functional competence, (4) general managerial competence, and (5) entrepreneurial creativity. Follow-up studies in the 1980s identified three additional constructs: (6) service or dedication to a cause, (7) pure challenge, and (8) life style.[3]

A 2008 study distinguishes between entrepreneurship and creativity to form nine possible constructs.[4]

Education

Publications

Awards, honors

Awards
Professional
Board member

See also

References

  1. , Edgar H. Schein's Model of Organizational Culture.
  2. http://www.valuebasedmanagement.net/methods_schein_three_levels_culture.html
  3. Schein, Edgar H. (November 1996). "Career anchors revisited: Implications for career development in the 21st century". Academy of Management Perspectives (The Academy of Management Executive) 10: 80–88. doi:10.5465/ame.1996.3145321. JSTOR 4165355.
  4. Danziger, Nira (2008). "The construct validity of Schein's career anchors orientation inventory". Emerald Group Publishing Limited. Retrieved 2011-11-09.

See Books above

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.