会议的文化驱动脚本:研究工作场所会议的综合理论视角

IF 3.9 1区 心理学 Q2 MANAGEMENT
T. Köhler, Helene Tenzer, C. Cramton
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目前的研究将工作场所会议概念化为社会嵌入的组织形式,并提出工作场所会议的跨文化比较可以深入了解会议结构和过程的差异。这让我们更深入地了解了在不同的文化环境中,会议是如何推动组织的。具体而言,我们构建了程序化理论,提出认知和行为脚本作为一个很有前途的理论视角,通过它来捕捉和整合社会文化对工作场所会议的影响。我们改编了Cramton等人(2021)的文化协调脚本制定(包括任务设置、角色结构、时间结构和线索),为工作场所会议过程开发了一个解释框架,为未来跨文化会议的研究提供方向。我们进一步整合了现有的跨文化会议差异研究,开发了一个通用的原型会议脚本和两个针对特定文化的会议脚本示例(适用于德国和美国会议),以证明这一程序理论的实用性和可用性。工作场所会议被组织用来维护其总体目标和宗旨。它们是一个重要的,也许是最重要的工具,组织成员通过它来确保其运作和追求其目标。会议的形式和进行会议的过程受到会议召开和组织所在的文化背景的影响。先前的研究已经确定了不同文化之间不同的会面特征和过程。比较不同文化背景下的会议结构和过程,可以帮助研究人员探索会议特征的变化如何促进组织。这反过来又使研究人员能够更好地阐明、解释和指导会议管理,以支持他们的核心目标和宗旨。在本文中,我们提出了一种新颖的方法,利用认知和行为脚本的视角,对会议结构和过程中的跨文化变化进行概念化、捕捉和研究。脚本是一种认知结构,它围绕事件通常如何展开来组织知识,并为参与者在一段时间内的互动方式提供处方,以在任务情境中实现协调行动。我们采用Cramton等人(2021)的文化协调脚本制定来创建会议脚本的定义以及原型会议脚本,这些脚本可以为未来的会议研究和组织中跨文化会议的改进提供基础。此外,我们为理解跨文化会议差异建立了一个总体的、综合的理论框架,这将指导未来对不同文化背景下的会议的研究和理论化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Culture-driven scripts for meetings: An integrative theoretical lens for studying workplace meetings
The current research conceptualizes workplace meetings as socially embedded forms of organizing and proposes that cross-cultural comparisons of workplace meetings offer insights into differences in meeting structures and processes. This provides a deeper understanding of how meetings drive organizing in different cultural settings. Specifically, we build programmatic theory proposing cognitive and behavioral scripts as a promising theoretical lens through which to capture and integrate sociocultural influences on workplace meetings. We adapt Cramton et al.'s (2021) cultural coordination scripts formulation (consisting of the task setting, role structure, temporal structure, and cues) to develop an interpretive framework for workplace meeting processes that orients future research on cross-cultural meetings. We further integrate existing research on cross-cultural meeting differences to develop a generic prototype meeting script and two illustrative examples of culturally specific meeting scripts (for German and U.S.-American meetings) to demonstrate the practical usefulness and usability of this programmatic theory. Workplace meetings are used by organizations to maintain their overarching goals and purpose. They are an important, maybe the most important, tool through which members of the organization ensure its functioning and the pursuit of its purpose. The form of meetings and the processes involved in carrying out meetings are influenced by the cultural context(s) in which the meeting is held and the organization resides. Previous research has identified meeting characteristics and processes that differ across cultures. Comparisons of meeting structures and processes embedded in different cultural contexts can help researchers explore how variations in meeting characteristics contribute to organizing in organizations. This in turn allows researchers to better illuminate, explain, and guide the management of meetings to support their core goals and purpose. In the current paper, we propose a novel way of conceptualizing, capturing, and studying cross-cultural variations in meeting structures and processes, using the lens of cognitive and behavioral scripts. Scripts are cognitive structures that organize knowledge around how events typically unfold and provide prescriptions for the ways in which actors should interact over time to achieve coordinated action in a task situation. We employ Cramton et al.'s (2021) cultural coordination scripts formulation to create a definition of meeting scripts as well as prototype meeting scripts that can provide the foundation for future meetings research and for improved facilitation of cross-cultural meetings in organizations. Furthermore, we build an overarching, integrative theoretical framework for understanding cross-cultural meeting differences, which will guide future research endeavors into and theorizing about meetings in different cultural contexts.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
1.60%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Organizational Psychology Review is a quarterly, peer-reviewed scholarly journal published by SAGE in partnership with the European Association of Work and Organizational Psychology. Organizational Psychology Review’s unique aim is to publish original conceptual work and meta-analyses in the field of organizational psychology (broadly defined to include applied psychology, industrial psychology, occupational psychology, organizational behavior, personnel psychology, and work psychology).Articles accepted for publication in Organizational Psychology Review will have the potential to have a major impact on research and practice in organizational psychology. They will offer analyses worth citing, worth following up on in primary research, and worth considering as a basis for applied managerial practice. As such, these should be contributions that move beyond straight forward reviews of the existing literature by developing new theory and insights. At the same time, however, they should be well-grounded in the state of the art and the empirical knowledge base, providing a good mix of a firm empirical and theoretical basis and exciting new ideas.
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