Edgar Schein

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Edgar Schein bigraphy, stories - Psychologist

Edgar Schein : biography

1928 –

Edgar Henry Schein (born 1928), a former professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, has made a notable mark on the field of organizational development in many areas, including career development, group process consultation, and organizational culture.

Publications

  • Brainwashing and Totalitarianization in Modern Society (1959)
  • Coercive Persuasion: A socio-psychological analysis of the "brainwashing" of American civilian prisoners by the Chinese Communists (1961), W. W. Norton (publishers)
  • Organizational Psychology (1980) ISBN 0-13-641332-3
  • Organizational Culture and Leadership (1985) ISBN 1-55542-487-2
  • Process Consultation Revisited (1999) ISBN 0-201-34596-X
  • Procesadvisering (2005) ISBN 90-5261-531-4

Schein’s ‘Career Anchors’

A career anchor is one’s self-concept, and consists of one’s perceptions of one’s talents and abilities, one’s basic values and one’s perceptions of motives and needs as they pertain to career.

In Schein’s original research from the mid-1970s he identified five possible career anchor constructs: (1) autonomy/independence, (2) security/stability, (3) technical-functional competence, (4) general managerial competence, and (5) entrepreneurial creativity. Follow-up studies in the 1980s identified three additional constructs: (6) service or dedication to a cause, (7) pure challenge, and (8) life style.

A 2008 study distinguishes between entrepreneurship and creativity to form nine possible constructs.

Schein’s organizational culture model

Schein’s model of organizational culture originated in the 1980s. Schein (2004) identifies three distinct levels in organizational cultures:

  1. artifacts and behaviours
  2. espoused values
  3. assumptions

The three levels refer to the degree to which the different cultural phenomena are visible to the observer.

  • Artifacts include any tangible, overt or verbally identifiable elements in an organization. Architecture, furniture, dress code, office jokes, all exemplify organizational artifacts. Artifacts are the visible elements in a culture and they can be recognized by people not part of the culture.
  • Espoused values are the organization’s stated values and rules of behavior. It is how the members represent the organization both to themselves and to others. This is often expressed in official philosophies and public statements of identity. It can sometimes often be a projection for the future, of what the members hope to become. Examples of this would be employee professionalism, or a "family first" mantra. Trouble may arise if espoused values by leaders are not in line with the general assumptions of the culture., Edgar H. Schein’s Model of Organizational Culture.
  • Shared Basic Assumptions are the deeply embedded, taken-for-granted behaviors which is usually unconscious, but constitute the essence of culture. These assumptions are typically so well integrated in the office dynamic that they are hard to recognize from within.http://www.valuebasedmanagement.net/methods_schein_three_levels_culture.html

Awards, honors

Awards
  • Lifetime Achievement Award in Workplace Learning and Performance of the American Society of Training and Development, February 3, 2000
  • Everett Cherrington Hughes Award for Career Scholarship, Careers Division of the Academy of Management, August 8, 2000
  • Marion Gislason Award for Leadership in Executive Development, Boston University School of Management Executive Development Roundtable, December 11, 2002
Professional
  • Fellow, American Psychological Association
  • Fellow, Academy of Management
Board Member
  • Advisory Board, Institute of Nuclear Power Operations
  • Board Member, Massachusetts Audubon Society
  • Board Member, Boston Lyric Opera

Education

  • Ph.D., social psychology, Harvard University, 1952
  • Master’s Degree, Psychology, Stanford University, 1949
  • University of Chicago