Explicit Problem Modeling: An Intervention Strategy
- 1 December 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Group & Organization Studies
- Vol. 6 (4) , 486-499
- https://doi.org/10.1177/105960118100600408
Abstract
The problems that organizational team members define depend on their idiosyncratic, subjective, and organizationally political beliefs. Organization development (OD) consultants are frequently highly skilled in attending to and working with the nuances of the team processes. They are frequently less skilled at finding ways of representing explicitly the complex problems that members bring to a team and the complex responses of other members in the processes of problem definition. The authors contend that OD consultants could usefully employ more explicit and less piecemeal representations of the problems that they work on with client teams. They examine some reasons why this is not usually done and offer one approach to overcome many of the difficulties and provide a strategy for intervening in the processes of problem definition in teams.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE INTERSUBJECTIVITY OF ISSUES AND ISSUES OF INTERSUBJECTIVITYJournal of Management Studies, 1981
- Subjectivity and Organisational Politics in Policy AnalysisPolicy & Politics, 1979
- A question of sizeOmega, 1979
- Operational Research and Organization DevelopmentHuman Relations, 1978
- Value Dilemmas In Organization DevelopmentThe Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 1977
- Political Strategies for Implementing Organizational ChangeGroup & Organization Studies, 1977
- Towards a Political Theory of Organizational InterventionHuman Relations, 1975
- Organization DevelopmentAnnual Review of Psychology, 1974
- Notes on the Context for LearningHarvard Educational Review, 1973
- When is a Change Not a Change?The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 1972