Why should I care? HWB, culture and behaviours Dr Wilson Wong CREATING AND DEVELOPING A HEALTH AND WELLBEING CULTURE Chester University 1 st May 2013 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Understanding Organizational Culture Part I
Advertisements

Competency Iceberg Model.
Introduction to Organization Culture
Domestic Violence, Parenting, and Behavior Outcomes of Children Chien-Chung Huang Rutgers University.
Texas State University Leadership Institute “Building Effective Teams”
Learn Management the Easy Way with the Help of Downloadable Power-point Presentations - Learn at Your Own Pace. The Presentation contains Animation. To.
Strategy, Ethics, and Social Responsibility McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Lectures Based on Leadership Communication By Deborah J. Barrett,
MGTO Dr. William A. Snow Hong Kong University of Science & Technology Department of Management of Organizations College of Business & Management.
Best Practices for Building a Productive Work Environment: A Human Resources Perspective Tim Delmont, Director Center for Human Resource Development 200.
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Organizational Behavior and Opportunity 1.Define organizational behavior. 2.Identify four action.
Defining Organizational Culture Chapter One Organizational Culture and Leadership Second Edition, 1991 Edgar Schein Wendy Baker-Thompson Public Sector.
1 Organizational Culture February 16, 2010 MGMT-4000 Linda Miklas, Christina Finegold Harvard University.
Levels of Responsibility
Culture. 14/22/04Karyn Lazarus2 Cultural Definition A pattern of shared basic assumptions that the group learned as it solved its problems of external.
Chapter 1 © 2011 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
What is Organizational Culture?
Organizational Culture and Ethical Values. Organizational Culture What is it? What is it? What are the components of culture? What are the components.
1 Nele De Cuyper & Thomas Rigotti University of Leipzig, Germany Balancing psychological contracts: Validation of a typology Catholic University of Leuven,
Introduction to Management LECTURE 26: Introduction to Management MGT
The Employer’s Duty of Care Mental Health & How It Impacts on Your Business – A Growing Issue Mr Mark Braithwaite Managing Director Gipping.
Individual, Personality and Attitudes Dr. G.D.R.U.U. Abeyrathne, Department of Economics, University of Ruhuna, Matara.
Session 5: Lion tamers and horse whisperers – shaping workplace cultures Presented by: Dr Paul CollingsQueensland Crime and Misconduct Commission.
Understanding Community Chapter 6 Fall What “communities” do you belong to? Fall
Political Psychology: Citizen Behaviors and Opinions Lecture 1 Political psychology.
Leadership & Management Discussion for Lesson 27: Characteristics of the Situation.
PROF DR ZAIDATOL AKMALIAH LOPE PIHIE FAKULTI PENGAJIAN PENDIDIKAN UNIVERSITI PUTRA MALAYSIA
Successful and Not Successful Implementation THE IMPACT OF ORGANIZATIONAL CLIMATE FACTORS Funding for this project is made possible through a Cooperative.
MaryLynn West-Moynes President Leading and managing culture change.
Careers in Psychology. First…  It is a social science.  There are many subfields.
Instilling Clinical Leadership, Ownership and Accountability.
ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE Prof. Jintae Kim, PhD Alliance Theological Seminary (845) ext Website:
Organizational Behavior
Organizational Behaviour with Rev Dr Japhet Ndhlovu.
Organizational Behavior Session 1. Organizational behavior OB is a field of study that investigates the impact that individuals, groups, and structure.
Organisational Culture Lecturer: Eric Vassilikos.
Organizational Culture Adapted from Ed Schein’s work on organizational culture by David W. Jamieson, 1993 Presented to CSUN Mgt 450 – Instructor Jeanne.
1 Organizational Culture February 14, 2012 MGMT-4000 Harvard University.
 Organizational Culture is the totality of beliefs, customs, traditions and values shared by the members of the organization.  It is important to consider.
COMMUNICATION STUDIES SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY Levels and Functions of Communication Dr. Marquita Byrd
The Context of Leadership:
© 2011 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Organizational Behavior and Opportunity 1.Define organizational behavior. 2.Identify four action.
1 Culture Class 10 MGMT E Organizational culture The system of shared actions, values, and beliefs that develops within an organization and guides.
OrganizationOrganization ä A formally structured collection of individuals working toward common goals. ä A social entity that is goal directed, designed.
Team 4 “Engaging personnel towards change and innovation.” Doris Davis Kate Hamilton Marie Motley Catherine Seage.
Chapter 15 Organizational Culture
OrganizationOrganization ä A formally structured collection of individuals working toward common goals. ä A social entity that is goal directed, designed.
Corporate Culture "the way we do things around here” combined beliefs, values, ethics, procedures, and atmosphere of an organization consists of largely.
The Behaviour Change Wheel: a cross-disciplinary model Susan Michie Professor of Health Psychology, UCL UCL Grand Challenges Town meeting May 2013.
- Wellbeing and Mental Health of Caregiver Dr. Jitendra Nagpal Program Director - Expressions India New Understanding New Hope.
Robert West Susan Michie University College London
Well-Being at Work, Really? Working towards total worker well-being Nicole Z. Stelter, PhD, LMFT Portfolio Lead, Total Workforce Health Kaiser Permanente.
Organizational Behavior (MGT-502) Lecture-36. Summary of Lecture-35.
Ergonomics. The word "Ergonomics" comes from two Greek words "ergon," meaning work, and "nomos" meaning "laws."
Chapter 2: Constraints and Challenges for the Global Manager
What is organisational culture? The unwritten code that affects the attitudes and behaviours of staff, approaches to decision making and the leadership.
Careers in Psychology.
Changing healthcare professional behaviour: the Behaviour Change Wheel
Week Six: Organizations, Socialization and Motivation
Organizational Culture
Chapter 14: Organizational Culture
ENTREPRENEURIAL CULTURE AND CLIMATE BY
ENTREPRENEURIAL CULTURE AND CLIMATE BY
Leadership & Management
Socialization Process of Employees
Leadership & Management
Matthijs Kalmijn Lonneke van den Berg Department of Sociology
Organizational Culture
Teams in Quality Organizations
Presentation transcript:

Why should I care? HWB, culture and behaviours Dr Wilson Wong CREATING AND DEVELOPING A HEALTH AND WELLBEING CULTURE Chester University 1 st May

Today’s talk... Main determinants of worker well-being Changing behaviour – nudge? Well-being culture? Thoughts for the day 2

Main psychological determinants of worker well-being Psychological ContractEmployment prospects ChoiceJob characteristi cs SupportTenure PartiesEmployer obligations Employee obligations Element s a.Content of PC b.Fulfilment of PC c.Violation of PC d.Fairness & trust a.Content of PC b.Fulfilment of PC a.Job insecurity b.Employabil ity a.Contract of choice b.Job of choice c.Professio n of choice a.whether character istics (e.g. Variety, standardi sation, repetitive ness) b.B. Individual differenc e a.Organisat ional support b.Superviso ry support a.Duration of contract b.Time left c.History of temp working d.Expectati ons of further work e.Motives for temporar y working 3 adapted from Guest, Isaksson & de Witte, 2010

Nudges towards health 4

6 Michie. Van stralen & West’s Behaviour Change Wheel

HWB culture? We can think of culture as the accumulated shared learning of a given group, covering behavioral, emotional, and cognitive elements of the group members’ total psychological functioning. For such shared learning to occur, there must be a history of shared experience that, in turn, implies some stability of membership in the group. Given such stability and a shared history, the various shared elements to form into patterns that eventually can be called a culture. Edgar Schein

Culture formation Culture Needs: Stability, consistency & meaning Stability of membershipShared learningHistory of shared experience 8 Group

Major concepts (associated with culture) Observed behavioral regularities in interactions (language, rituals) Group norms Espoused values Formal philosophy Rules of the game Climate Embedded skills Habits of thinking, mental models and/or linguistic paradigms Shared meanings “Root metaphors” or integrating symbols Culture implies structural stability and patterning or integration

Thoughts for the day There are areas that are outside your control Externalities matter (e.g. Income disparities only matter if you are poorer Oishi, Kesebir & Diener 2011) Treat employees as adults When you make promises, Keep them Have discipline of Job design, workload planning Designer culture – caution, but if you must identify and engage opinion leaders (Rogers, 2003) 10

Thank you Dr Wilson 11

References Butterworth, P. Leach LS, Strazdins L, et al. (2011). The psychosocial quality of work determines whether employment has benefits for mental health: Results from a longitudinal national household panel survey. Occup Environ Med. doi: /oem Department of HealthGuest, D. E., Isakson, K. & De Witte, H. (2010) (Eds.). Employment contracts, psychological contracts, and employee well-being: An international study. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Michie, S., van Stralen, M. M. & West, R. (2011). The behaviour change wheel: A new method for characterising and designing behaviour change interventions. Downloaded on from Oishi, Shigehiro, Kesebir, Selin, & Diener, Ed. (2011). Income inequality and happiness. Psychological Science, 22(9), Rogers, E. M. (2003). Diffusion of innovations (5 th ed.) New York: Free Press. Schein, E. (2004). Organizational culture and leadership. 3rd Edition. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. 12