Devry mgmt410 week 6 quiz latest 2015 december
Devry MGMt410 week 6 quiz latest 2015 december
Question 1. 1. (TCO 10) Consider this scenario: John Hopken is the new supervisor of a team of 12 computer programmers. He has been in his position for 10 months, after being promoted to his position from programmer (where he had been in place for 8 years). The promotion was hard-won; four others on his team also applied for the promotion, and when he got his promotion, the other four employees who didn’t get the position were rather disgruntled. One of them lashed out in a meeting early on and called him a yes-man, but otherwise most of the issues have been undercurrents and rumor based. These four employees are referred to as Competitors 1, 2, and 3 and Competitor Yes-Man for the purposes of this question.
During the year, five older members of his team resigned—four through regular retirements and one after being accused of falsifying expense reports. None of the five were in the group of four who had competed against him for his position. John filled all five position openings with outside hires. Three of them had similar backgrounds to John’s—they all went to his alma mater for their computer degrees and like basketball. In fact, last week John and the three of them attended a Bulls game together. These employees will be referred to as Bulls 1, 2, and 3. The other two employees were both females he hired because HR told him he had to. (Up until now, there were no females on the team.) We’ll call them Lady 1 and 2. They don’t like basketball. Lady 1 was hired 6 months ago, and Lady 2 was hired last month.
Now, it is performance appraisal time. Assume each of these employees does a similar amount of work, produces relatively similar amounts of code, and does a good job. None of them create waves, and the new people have gotten their work under way and are working hard. Other than the yes-man meeting and one comment on the men’s room wall saying that “Hopken is a jerk,” things have mostly gone smoothly. John figures that one of the Competitors wrote that.
John is told by HR he has to do performance appraisals this month. He is told to rate his people on a scale of 1–4, where 1 is “not meeting expectations,” 2 is “too new to rate,” 3 is “meeting expectations,” and 4 is “exceeding expectations.” HR said that he must have no more than two 4s, no more than eight 3s, and at least two 1s or 2s. He asks an HR representative what “too new” means, and she says it applies to anyone who has not been in the position for 3 months or more.
He looks at the paperwork and his list, and 20 minutes later has his ratings done with a paragraph scribbled out to provide to his workers.
Here are his ratings.
Bulls 1: 4
Bulls 2: 4
Bulls 3: 3
Lady 1: 3
Other 1: 3
Other 2: 3
Other 3: 3
Competitor 1: 3
Competitor 2: 3
Competitor 3: 3
Lady 2: 2
Competitor YM: 1
Please answer the following questions.
(1.) Identify and describe the six factors that distort performance appraisals. (15 points)
(2.) Describe whether you think that any of these six factors were present in the appraisals done here. Justify your decision either way. (15 points)
(3.) Name three ways you would consider improving the process for performance appraisal at this company. (10 points) (Points : 40)
Spellchecker
Question 2.2. (TCO 8) Barry works as a janitor in a large department store, along with four other janitors. Last week, his boss died suddenly. The manager of the operations department called Barry into her office and asked him if he would please take over the role of supervisor to the janitors (his late boss’s old position). Along with the position comes more pay and no more cleaning. He accepts the position and is told he will begin the job on Monday and that an HR specialist will shadow him for the next month while pointing out to him his new tasks. Which kind of training is Barry getting ready to experience? (Points : 5)
Promotional events planning.
Job rotation
on the job training.
Committee assignment
Survival training
Question 3.3. (TCO 8) Which of the following best explains the role of the CEO in orientation? (Points : 5)
Optional but helpful
Provides direction and inspiration, such as a cheerleader at a pep rally
Shows why his or her cubicle is the same as everyone else’s at the company
Provides an open-door access to the CEO and board of directors from Day 1
Question 4.4. (TCO 9) Royce has worked for the same manufacturing firm for 20 years. Last week, he attended a workshop where he reflected on his goals and aspirations. He learned that two of his vocational preferences were satisfied in his current job and that neither one of them would be present in a promotion. He, along with 58 of his coworkers, is in line for a promotion next year. Attending this session was a recommended step. Which kind of session did Royce attend? (Points : 5)
Career development
Sigma management practice
Organizational development
Employee training
Retirement planning
Question 5.5. (TCO 11) _____ focuses on helping an employee make long-term career plans, and _____ addresses an employee’s short-term job skills. (Points : 5)
Mentoring; coaching
Coaching; mentoring
Recruiting; coaching
Appraising; training
Question 6.6. (TCO 11) Which of these pieces of legislation requires that initial job offers for jobs with the same attributes be equal, regardless of gender? (Points : 5)
Comparable Action and Worth Standard
Americans with Disabilities Act
Fair Labor Standards Act
Equal Pay Act of 1963
Civil Rights Act
Question 7.7. (TCO 11) Which of the following are issues or laws surrounding pay secrecy? (Points : 5)
Supervisor harassment due to race and gender and Title VII
Union mentalities and pension reform
Lily Ledbetter Act and concerted activity
All of the above