(last updated 9/5/06)
| Class | Tues. & Thurs. | 9:00-10:20 | PH A18B | |
| Instructor | Robert Kraut |
|
x8-7694 | |
| Office hours: | Most afternoons | email for an appointment | NSH 3515 | |
| TA | Kim Ling | kling+com@andrew.cmu.edu | Posner 315C | |
|
email for an appointment | |||
| Secretary | Sue O'Connor | so27@andrew.cmu.edu | ||
| Website: | www.cs.cmu.edu/~kraut/orgcomm | |||
| Blackboard | http://www.cmu.edu/blackboard/ | |||
Note. This syllabus will be updated as the semester progresses. Updates are available at www.cs.cmu.edu/~kraut/orgcomm and will also be posted on the course announcement page on blackboard.
Most of management is communication. You communicate to get information that will be the basis of decisions, to provide a vision for the people who work for and with you, to coordinate activity, and to sell yourself and your work. The goal of this course is to identify communication challenges within work groups and organization and ways to overcome them. To do this requires that we know how communication normally works, what parts are difficult, and how to fix it when it goes wrong.
The focus of this course is on providing you with a broad understanding of the way communication operates within dyads, work groups, and organizations. The intent is to give you theoretical and empirical underpinnings for the communication you will undoubtedly participate in when you move to a work environment, and strategies for improving communication within your groups. Because technology is changing communication patterns and outcomes both in organizations and more broadly in society, the course examines these technological changes. Readings come primarily from the empirical research literature.
After completing this course you should be able to :
- Better understand what makes communication within and between groups more or less effective.
- Apply principles from research to make the groups you work in more effective.
- Better evaluate claims about groups in terms of empirical evidence.
- Apply data gathering and analysis techniques to diagnosing problems in workgroups.
Texts
Cialdini, Robert B. (2000) Influence: Science and practice (4rd Edition). Talman Co.
Snook, S. (2000). Friendly fire. Princeton NJ: University of Princeton Press.
Most articles are available as hyperlinks from the course syllabus. If there is an error, please let me know as soon as possible, so that I can correct the link. In addition, most are also available directly from the CMU Library's website. You will need to use the library's WevVPN service or CMU's Virtual Private Network.
1: go to the library web page (http://www.library.cmu.edu/ 2: click on Cameo 3: click on the button on top marked course reserves. 4: Type in 88341 and click course 6: Click on "View" on any item you wish to access. 7: Click on the URL to download the PDF version of the article. Because the library will not have all the required articles available on e-reserve by the first day of class, some articles are contained in a stopgap website -- http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~kraut/articles--until the library catches up. Articles are listed by first author's name and date.. This archive is password-protected. The userid and password will be distributed to registered students by email and is also available from the blackboard account associated with the course.
Course requirements
Assignment |
Due |
Percent of grade |
Attendance and class participation |
Daily |
|
Pop quizzes |
Approximately bi-weekly |
|
Technology and common ground |
Sept 12 |
|
Team conflict self-reflection |
Oct 10 |
|
| Nov 9 |
15%
|
|
| Nov 28 |
15%
|
|
Final exam |
Dec 14th, 5:30 |
|
You can substitute up to 3 research participation credits for 3 quiz grades. A description of the Research Participation Program is available at http://sds-tepper.sona-systems.com.
The blackboard site for this course is listed as F06-Organizational Communication.
Student pictures
1. Aug 29: Course overview
2. Aug 31: The social component in communication
A cooperative model of human communication proposes that speakers take into account what they expect their listeners to understand and update that information as they are speaking. Listeners have an obligation to indicate their state of knowledge and to cooperate with the speaker to produce an utterance.
Krauss, R. M. & Fussell, S. R. (1990). Mutual knowledge and communicative effectiveness. In J. Galegher & R. E. Kraut, et al. (Eds.), Intellectual teamwork: Social and technological foundations of cooperative work (pp. 111-145). Hillsdale, NJ, England: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Clark, Herbert H. & Brennan, Susan E. (1991). Grounding in communication. In L. B. Resnick, R. M. Levine, & S. D. Teasley (Eds.). Perspectives on socially shared cognition. (pp. 127-149). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
3. Sept 5: The role of visual information in grounding
4. Sept 7: Catch-up session
5. Sept 12: Managerial communication
6. Sept 14: Communication and time
7. Sept 19: Catch-up session
8. Sept 21: Communication, familiarity and coordination
Having common beliefs and views of a situation should allow groups to communicate more efficiently. How does this work?
9. Sept 26: Diversity in groups (I)
Many analysts stress the value of having demographically and intellectually diverse work groups, for reasons of fairness and performance. What are the benefits and costs of diversity of work groups? Can we identify techniques for getting value from diversity, while minimizing some of its known costs?
10. Sept 28: Diversity in groups (II)
11. Sept Oct 3: Group identity through goal conflict
12. Oct 5: Managing conflict in groups
13. Oct 10: Problems in distributed groups
14. Oct 12: Successful distributed groups
15: Oct 17: Negotiation
16 Oct 19: Negotiation
17.Oct 24: Social loafing
20. Oct 26: Self-presentation (I)
21. Oct 31: Self-presentation (II)
22. Nov 2: Organizational self-presentation
23. Nov 7: Attitudes and persuasion
24. Nov 9: Persuasion and liking
25 Nov 14: Persuasion and social pressure
18. Nov 16: Persuasion make-up
19. Nov 21: Friendly fire (I)
Snook's book Friendly Fire describes an incident following the war in the Persian Gulf when two US F-16 fighters shot down two US Blackhawk helicopters ferrying UN diplomats around the area, resulting in the death of 26 peacekeepers. In some sense, this incident represents a failure of communication, at multiple levels. We'll treat the book as a case study in the types of actions that can go wrong in communication within and between groups.
Nov 24: Thanksgiving (No class)
26. Nov 28: Friendly fire (II)
Charity appeals analysis n due.
27 Nov 30: Friendly Fire (III)
28. Dec 5: Social networks/Communication boundaries (I)
People are important sources for information and other resources. Interpersonal networking is important to gain these resources, but getting to new pockets of information is what is crucial.
Download UCINet to do your own network analyses.
Handout giving the basics of social network analysis and how to use UCINet are available here.
Everton's Guide for the Visually Perplexed is a good introduction to visualizing social networks in UCINet.
29. Dec 7: Social networks and outcomes
Final Exam: Thurs, Dec 14th, 5:30-8:30PM,