IB822-10 Leading and Managing Change
Introductory description
This module aims to introduce students to an interdisciplinary, cross-national and historically informed understanding of the idea of change and its significance for organisations in the contemporary period.
Module aims
This module aims to introduce students to an interdisciplinary, cross-national and historically informed understanding of the idea of change and its significance for organisations in the contemporary period. Students will be introduced to multiple perspectives, models and maps for understanding the nature of organisational change and how it is managed.
The module will develop students’ skills in understanding how the management of organisational change is a collective 'sensemaking' process involving the development of shared cultures and discourse carried through technological intermediaries. It will also introduce students to the dilemmas faced by managers in implementing change.
The module seeks to enable students to critically examine models of change and the development of the learning organisation.
Outline syllabus
This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.
Section 1: Understanding Change: concepts and perspectives
- The meaning of change: interdisciplinary perspectives on identifying, controlling and assessing the impact of change
- Organisations in an age of uncertainty and change? Historical comparisons and contemporary debates
Section 2: Organisational change: frameworks and models - Images and approaches to managing change
- Identifying and diagnosing change
- Models for managing change: issues of process, organisation and communication
Section 3: Understanding Change processes: key issues and debates - Power, Politics and Resistance in the management of change
- The use of language, discourse and culture in the management of change
- Senior managers and the leadership of change: pressures and processes
- Middle managers in the change process
- The Change Revolution / Change Fatigue: The dynamics of continuous change in the public and private sectors and its impact
Section 4: Understanding Change processes: key issues and debates - Changing in contexts of ambiguity and uncertainty
- designing for wickedness (polivocality) and for resilience in face of extreme ambiguity and uncertainty?
- The relevance of time in change: history and the future
- Change in light of Grand-Challenges
Learning outcomes
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
- Demonstrate a comprehensive understanding of the major perspectives for analysing the idea of change and how it is relevant to contemporary organisations.
- Demonstrate a comprehensive understanding of the way in which senior managers lead change initiatives and the institutional constraints under which they work
- Critically analyse how managers exercise power and engage in politics to influence other employees in order to achieve outcomes.
- Identify and evaluate the distinctive tensions faced by middle managers in change processes and recognise ways of overcoming these problems, including issues of language, culture and discourse
- Identify and evaluate ways in which the underlying assumptions of the change discourse create their own self-sustaining dynamic and are a force for isomorphic processes across different types of organisation initiatives and the institutional constraints under which they work.
- Critically assess a variety of perspectives on the management of organisational change.
- Recognise and critically engage with assumptions underpinning the assumptions of the management of organisational change.
Indicative reading list
The set textbook for this module is:
Myers, P.; Hulks, S. and Wiggins, L. (2012)
Organisational Change: Perspectives on Theory and Practice
Oxford: OUP Oxford
Further reading
Buchanan, D. and Badham, R. (1999) Power, Politics and Organizational Change London: Sage
Kotter, J. and Cohen, D.S. (2002) The Heart of Change Harvard, MA: Harvard Business School Press
Kotter, J. P. (2012 Leading Change Boston: Harvard Business Review Press
Palmer, I;, Dunford, R. and Buchanan, D.A. (2017) Managing organizational change: A multiple perspectives approach McGraw Hill
Subject specific skills
Analyse and synthesise organisational change, its problems and dilemmas
Diagnose change pressures and identify and evaluate appropriate management responses
Identify and evaluate resistances to change.
Transferable skills
Demonstrate developed academic communication skills.
Study time
Type | Required |
---|---|
Online learning (scheduled sessions) | 6 sessions of 1 hour (9%) |
Online learning (independent) | 21 sessions of 1 hour (30%) |
Private study | 43 hours (61%) |
Total | 70 hours |
Private study description
Private Study to include preparation for lectures. Session length may vary from the above.
Costs
No further costs have been identified for this module.
You do not need to pass all assessment components to pass the module.
Assessment group A6
Weighting | Study time | Eligible for self-certification | |
---|---|---|---|
Assessment component |
|||
Written Assignment | 100% | 30 hours | Yes (extension) |
Reassessment component is the same |
Feedback on assessment
Assessments are graded using standard University Postgraduate Marking Criteria and written feedback is provided. Feedback for individual essays includes comments on a marksheet.
Pre-requisites
To take this module, you must have passed:
Courses
This module is Optional for:
-
TIBS-N1Q1 Postgraduate Business Administration (Executive) London
- Year 1 of N1Q1 Business Administration (Executive) London
- Year 3 of N1Q1 Business Administration (Executive) London
- Year 1 of TIBS-N1Q4 Postgraduate Business Administration (Executive) London
- Year 1 of TIBS-N1PW Postgraduate Taught Business Administration (Distance Learning)
-
TIBS-N1Q2 Postgraduate Taught Business Administration (Distance Learning)
- Year 1 of N1Q2 Business Administration (Distance Learning)
- Year 2 of N1Q2 Business Administration (Distance Learning)
- Year 1 of TIBS-N1P9 Postgraduate Taught Business Administration (Executive)
- Year 1 of TIBS-N1Q3 Postgraduate Taught Business Administration (Executive)