ebook img

Employee Transition throughout an Appreciative Inquiry Intervention by Philip John Maxton ... PDF

360 Pages·2016·7.04 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Employee Transition throughout an Appreciative Inquiry Intervention by Philip John Maxton ...

EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION Employee Transition throughout an Appreciative Inquiry Intervention by Philip John Maxton Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Business Administration at the Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria Supervisor: Emeritus Professor John M. Verster (October, 2016) EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION ii Abstract As the practice of organisational development (OD) bifurcates into the traditional form of diagnostic OD and the emerging form of dialogic OD (Bushe & Marshak, 2009) it is especially important to obtain a better theoretical understanding of dialogic OD. This need is particularly true of Appreciative Inquiry (AI) as the most prominent form of dialogic OD. The purpose of the research was to build on current theory underlying AI. The specific research question addressed was: In the course of an AI intervention aimed at transformational organisational change, how do transitioning individual employees feel and make sense for themselves? The research adopted a multiple-case study design with a predominantly qualitative methodology. A form of theory-driven evaluation known as realist evaluation (Pawson & Tilley, 1997)—comprising of context-mechanism-outcome pattern configurations—was applied. The purposively selected sample consisted of six employees who had not transitioned well following an earlier diagnostic OD intervention with a comparable change objective. Data were collected longitudinally using a combination of diary prompts, direct observation, and interviews. The main findings indicate that: (a) three conceptually independent types of cognitive outcome patterns can occur under AI; (b) during-AI contexts of positivity-orientated activities and a safe environment each predispose transition towards particular types of cognitive outcome patterns; (c) certain pre-AI contexts, such as dogmatism at the level of the individual, influence the degree of transition; and (d) certain reflective mechanisms link particular contexts and affective outcome patterns. The findings of the study build on, and are partly presented in the format of Bushe’s (2013b) facets of generativity model and an analytic framework is presented which offers a “way of seeing” transition under an AI intervention. By studying employee transition under AI in a well-specified research design, using clearly defined and well operationalised constructs, the research contributes theory which is substantially more comprehensive than previously available and from which testable propositions can be developed. It thereby overcomes concerns of authors such as Golembiewski (2000) and Bushe (2007) regarding the incompatibility of AI— with its basis in social constructionism—and “rigorous” research. Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION iii Acknowledgements I would like to sincerely thank Irene, Ben, Lisa, and Dean for their daily support and understanding throughout my studies. It has been a pleasure and a privilege to have been supervised by Professor John Verster. I thank him for his patience and I greatly admire him for his expertise and wisdom. I thank Dr Kerrin Myers for her valuable input, particularly regarding qualitative research and I thank Professor Helena Barnard for her enthusiastic support and guidance. I acknowledge Professor Johann Mouton’s advice to use a realist evaluation. I thank Professors Gervase Bushe, Jennifer Howard-Grenville, Mary Jo Hatch, Phil Mirvis, Jean Bartunek, Ron Fry and David Cooperrider for their formal and informal comments at various workshops, conferences, and blatant hijackings. Dr Anastasia Bukashe expertly helped with the appreciative inquiries and Rod Charlton substantially helped with data collection in the pilot study. Jennifer Charlton proved to be an invaluable editor. I thank the Head of Retail Banking at “Seibank” for allowing the research to take place in his organisation and I thank the shareholders and senior managers at my employer for supporting and encouraging my endeavours. Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract ............................................................................................................................. ii Acknowledgements .......................................................................................................... iii CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION ........................................................................... 1 Background and Context .................................................................................................. 2 Trends in the Field of Organisational Development ................................................................. 2 The Tempo of Organisational Change ...................................................................................... 5 Levels of Analysis ..................................................................................................................... 6 Problem Statement ............................................................................................................ 8 Statement of Purpose ........................................................................................................ 8 Research Design ............................................................................................................... 8 Rationale and Significance ............................................................................................. 12 Definitions of Key Terminology ..................................................................................... 12 The Researcher ............................................................................................................... 13 Organisation of the Thesis .............................................................................................. 14 CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE STUDY AND DEVELOPMENT OF A DEDUCED PROGRAMME THEORY ...................................................................... 16 Transition Theory ........................................................................................................... 16 Learning and Schema Theory Concepts which Support Transition Theory ........................... 17 The Basis of Transition Theory in Lewin’s Theories of Change ............................................ 22 Transition Path Models ........................................................................................................... 26 Summary of Transition Theory ............................................................................................... 28 Appreciative Inquiry ....................................................................................................... 31 Appreciative Inquiry as a Form of Dialogic OD ..................................................................... 31 Appreciative Inquiry and Action Research ............................................................................. 33 The ‘Positivity versus Generativity’ Debate ........................................................................... 34 Transition under Appreciative Inquiry .................................................................................... 36 Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION v Development of a Deduced Programme Theory of Employee Transition throughout an Appreciative Inquiry Intervention ......................................................... 43 Contexts .................................................................................................................................. 43 Outcome Patterns .................................................................................................................... 44 Mechanisms ............................................................................................................................ 53 The Deduced Programme Theory ........................................................................................... 58 The Research Questions .................................................................................................. 61 CHAPTER THREE: RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHOD ................................ 63 The Research Design: Multiple-case Study Cast in a Realist Evaluation ...................... 63 Case Study Research ............................................................................................................... 63 Evaluation Research ................................................................................................................ 64 Methods of Selection ...................................................................................................... 68 The Host Organisation for the Main Study ............................................................................. 68 Number of Cases and Case-Selection Criteria ........................................................................ 71 Methods of Data Collection and the Data-collection Instruments .................................. 75 Data Collection by Means of Diaries ...................................................................................... 79 Data Collection by Means of Interviews ................................................................................. 80 Data Collection by Means of Direct Observation ................................................................... 81 Data-collection Instruments .................................................................................................... 83 Pilot study: Testing and Refinement of the Data-collection Instruments ............................... 89 Methods of Data Analysis ............................................................................................... 90 Deduced Coding Framework .................................................................................................. 90 Data-Coding Techniques and Processes ................................................................................. 91 The Overall Analytical Process ............................................................................................... 94 Ethical Considerations .................................................................................................... 97 CHAPTER FOUR: WITHIN-CASE ANALYSES .................................................... 98 Within-Case Analysis for Allison ................................................................................... 98 Data Description ..................................................................................................................... 98 Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION vi Data Analysis ........................................................................................................................ 108 Within-case Analysis for Bernice ................................................................................. 113 Data Description ................................................................................................................... 113 Data Analysis ........................................................................................................................ 124 Within-case Analysis for Eddie .................................................................................... 130 Data Description ................................................................................................................... 130 Data Analysis ........................................................................................................................ 138 Within-case Analysis for Lala ...................................................................................... 143 Data Description ................................................................................................................... 143 Data Analysis ........................................................................................................................ 153 Within-case Analysis for Maria .................................................................................... 160 Data Description ................................................................................................................... 160 Data Analysis ........................................................................................................................ 168 Within-case Analysis for Susan .................................................................................... 175 Data Description ................................................................................................................... 175 Data Analysis ........................................................................................................................ 184 Summary of Within-case Analyses ............................................................................... 191 Transition in Terms of New Insight ...................................................................................... 191 Transition in Terms of the Way of Knowing ........................................................................ 193 Transition in Terms of Positive Reinterpretation .................................................................. 193 CHAPTER FIVE: CROSS-CASE ANALYSIS ....................................................... 197 Case Ordered Display by Degree of Transition ............................................................ 197 High Transition Cases ........................................................................................................... 198 Medium Transition Cases ..................................................................................................... 199 Low Transition Cases ............................................................................................................ 200 Transition by Management and Staff Sub-groups ........................................................ 202 Management Sub-group ........................................................................................................ 202 Staff Sub-group ..................................................................................................................... 203 Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION vii Transition Themes ........................................................................................................ 203 The Bank as Caring ............................................................................................................... 203 The Bank as a Great Place to Work ...................................................................................... 205 The Need to Adopt a More Participative Style of Management ........................................... 206 Opinion of the Alignment ..................................................................................................... 207 Learning to Look at Bigger Picture of Organisational Change ............................................. 208 Learning about the Need for Participation in Organisational Change .................................. 209 Learning Regarding the Ability to Choose how to React to Change .................................... 210 Assertiveness Towards Those More Senior in the Management Hierarchy ......................... 212 Putting the Alignment in the Past .......................................................................................... 212 Positive Attitude towards Change ‘Out There’ ..................................................................... 213 Pre-AI Contexts ............................................................................................................ 215 During-AI Contexts ...................................................................................................... 216 The Fact that Top Management Initiated the AI Process and/or Showed Interest in the Recommendations ................................................................................................................. 216 Became Aware of the Viewpoint of Others .......................................................................... 216 An Environment in which Participants at Multiple Levels Felt Free to Talk Openly ........... 217 The Fact that the Contents of the AI Process was Determined by the Participants .............. 217 ‘Envisioning the Positive Future’ Activity ........................................................................... 218 Inclusion of Individual Responsibilities in Discussion of Organisational Change and the Holistic Nature of the Inquiry ............................................................................................... 218 Exposure to Seeing the Videos ............................................................................................. 218 The Positive Attitude of the Facilitator ................................................................................. 219 Completing the Pre-AI Diary Response Form ...................................................................... 219 The Passage of Time ............................................................................................................. 220 Mechanisms .................................................................................................................. 220 Process Reflection ................................................................................................................. 220 Content Reflection ................................................................................................................ 221 Critical Reflection on Assumptions ...................................................................................... 221 Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION viii Feelings of Increased Pleasantness ............................................................................... 222 Feelings of Participation ............................................................................................... 223 Time-ordered Display ................................................................................................... 224 Across-category Clustering ........................................................................................... 225 CHAPTER SIX: DISCUSSION ................................................................................ 227 Types of Cognitive Outcome Patterns and the Role of During-AI Contexts ............... 229 Types of Cognitive Outcome Patterns .................................................................................. 229 During-AI Contexts ............................................................................................................... 235 Summary of Types of Cognitive Outcome Patterns and the Role of During-AI Contexts ... 238 The Role of Pre-AI Contexts on the Degree of Transition ........................................... 239 Degree of Transition ............................................................................................................. 239 Pre-AI Contexts ..................................................................................................................... 241 Summary of Role of Pre-AI Contexts on the Degree of Transition ...................................... 246 The Affective Outcome Patterns and the Role of Reflective Mechanisms on Transition ...................................................................................................................... 247 Transition without Critical Reflection on Assumptions and with Increased Pleasantness ... 247 The Occurrence of Critical Reflection on Assumptions with Feelings of Unpleasantness ... 250 The Effect of Initiating an AI Intervention ........................................................................... 252 Unallocated Outcome Regularity Grouping .......................................................................... 253 Summary of Affective Outcome Patterns and the Role of Reflective Mechanisms on Transition .............................................................................................................................. 255 Review of the Analytic Framework .............................................................................. 256 Generative Propositions ................................................................................................ 257 Trustworthiness of the Study ........................................................................................ 262 Credibility ............................................................................................................................. 263 Transferability ....................................................................................................................... 265 Dependability and Confirmability ......................................................................................... 266 Trustworthiness: Summary ................................................................................................... 268 Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION ix CHAPTER SEVEN: CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS .................. 269 Research Contribution .................................................................................................. 269 Theoretical Contribution ....................................................................................................... 269 Methodological Contribution ................................................................................................ 271 Empirical Contribution ......................................................................................................... 274 Practical Contribution ........................................................................................................... 275 Limitations of the Study ............................................................................................... 277 Recommendations for further research ......................................................................... 279 Conclusion .................................................................................................................... 281 References .................................................................................................................... 282 Appendices .................................................................................................................... 297 Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. EMPLOYEE TRANSITION THROUGHOUT AN AI INTERVENTION x List of Figures Figure 1: Generic model for a programme theory in realist evaluation (Pawson & Tilley, 1997, p. 58). ........................................................................................................... 9 Figure 2: Stages of transition (Adams & Spencer, 1988, p. 62). ................................... 26 Figure 3: Cyclical transition model (French & Delahaye, 1996, p. 26) ........................ 27 Figure 4: Change curves (Schneider & Goldwasser, 1998, p. 41) ................................ 28 Figure 5: Summary of transition path based on literature. ............................................ 29 Figure 6: Facets of generativity from Bushe (2013b, p. 93). ......................................... 36 Figure 7: Deduced programme theory for employee transition throughout an Appreciative Inquiry Intervention .................................................................................. 59 Figure 8: The accumulated number of categories per case ............................................ 75 Figure 9: Data collection process. ................................................................................. 78 Figure 10: Russell’s (1989) circumplex model for measuring emotion. ....................... 85 Figure 11: The data-coding techniques and processes. ................................................. 93 Figure 12: The analytical process as adapted from Pawson and Tilley (1997) ............. 95 Figure 13: Allison’s transition path in the format of focused configurations. ............. 113 Figure 14: Bernice’s transition path in the format of focused configurations. ............ 130 Figure 15: Eddie’s transition path in the format of focused configurations. ............... 143 Figure 16: Lala’s transition path in the format of focused configurations. ................. 160 Figure 17: Maria’s transition path in the format of focused configurations. ............... 175 Figure 18: Susan’s transition path in the format of focused configurations. ............... 191 Figure 19: The abstract configurations relating to types of cognitive outcome patterns. ...................................................................................................................................... 234 Figure 20: The abstract configurations relating to types of cognitive outcome patterns and generativity and positivity-orientated activities ..................................................... 239 Figure 21: Revised programme theory for employee transition throughout an Appreciative Inquiry Intervention.. .............................................................................. 258 Copyright © 2017, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria.

Description:
need is particularly true of Appreciative Inquiry (AI) as the most prominent form of what circumstances and in what respects, and how?' .. Exploding the 'Clean Slate' Fallacy”, defined unlearning in relation to the training of.
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.