Sunday, October 13, 2019
A Comparison of Classical Management Theorists and Contingency Theorist
A Comparison of Classical Management Theorists and Contingency Theorists      The management field is characterised by a wide variety of theories,  schools and directions. This essay examines the classical and  contingency schools of thought -- the approaches to organization that  have had the greatest impact on management today. Firstly the essay  delineates and criticises the important theories propounded by  classical writers. The essay continues with an account of the  contingency school, and finally evaluates its impacts on managerial  thought.    Up until about the late 1950s academic writing about organisational  structure was dominated by the classical management school. This held  that there was a single organisational structure that was effective in  all organisations. (Clegg & Handy, 1999). According to Holt (1999),  the classical school is characterised by ?being highly structured,  with emphasis on the formal organisation with clearly defined  functions and detailed rules, autocratic leadership, a rigid chain of  command and control by superiors? (Holt, 1999, p.137). The three  greatest proponents of classical theory were Taylor, Fayol, and Weber.  Each identifies detailed principles and methods through which this  kind of organisation could be achieved.    Taylor (1947) developed a systematic approach to called ?Scientific  Management?, which focused on efficient production. Through the study  of task movements, or ?time and motion studies? as it was known, he  recognized matching the correct worker to the task was crucial to  increasing work efficiency. Under this so-called Taylorism, emphasis  is placed on power confered to those in control. According to Morgan  (1997), this approach to work design is found in traditional forms of  assembly-line manufacturing and in production processes.    Another major sub-field within the classical perspective is  ?Administrative Management,? set forth by Fayol (1949). While  Scientific Management took a micro approach, Fayol saw the macro  concepts, a body of knowledge which emphasised broad administrative  principles applicable to large organizations. In Fayol?s account,  management is conceptualised as consisting of five elements, namely  planning, organizing, command, co-ordination, and control. He also  developed 14 principles of management or organisation, the best-known  being division of work, unit...              ...ure. Academy of Management  Journal, 25 (3), 553-566.    Luthans, F. (1973). The Contingency Theory of Management: A path out  of the jungle. Business Horizons, 6, 67-72    Meyer, M.W. (1972). Size and the structure of organizations: A causal  analysis, American Sociological Review, 37, 434-441.    Pugh, D., Hickson, D., Hinings, R. & Turner, C. (1969). The context of  organization structures. Administrative Science Quarterly 14:91-114.    Pugh, D. & Hickson, D. (1996). Writers on organisations. London:  Penguin.    Robbins, S. & Barnwell, N. (2002). Organisation Theory: Concepts and  cases. Victoria, Australia: Pentice Hall.    Taylor, F.W. (1947). Scientific Management, Harper & Row.    Watz, T. (1996). Technology rules OK? A review of technological  determinism and contingency theory. Creativity and Innovation  Management, 5(1) 13-21.    Weber, M. (1947). The Theory of Social and Economic Organization. A.H.  Henderson and Talcott Parsons (eds.). Glencoe, IL: Free Press.    Woodward, J. (1980). Industrial Organization: Theory and Practice,  second edition. New York: Oxford University Press    ---------------------------------------------------------------------    [1] Pugh et al.                      
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