Literary Agents In Michigan
Positive Organizational Psychology
Since the early 90s, a charged-up group of writers, researchers and educators
has been deconstructing the psychological profession’s focus on pathology and
rebuilding it with the study of what can go right with people and
institutions. They call themselves positive psychologists. These thinkers don’
t claim to have invented anything new or created a new profession. They
distinguish themselves by their perspective. The value of positive psychology
lies in its uniting of what had been scattered and disparate lines of theory
and research about what makes life most worth living, writes Martin Seligman,
a leading “positive” psychologist.
Leading Lights in Positive Psychology: Dr. Martin Seligman, University of
Pennsylvania, is one of the most visible thought leaders on positive
psychology. Seligman’s work on depression, learned pessimism and learned
optimism earned him a solid reputation long before he became a proponent of
positive psychology. Since the early 1990s, he has focused on the study of
positive subjective experience, positive individual traits, and positive
institutions. During his term as president of the American Psychological
Association Seligman promoted the study of positive psychology. Seligman’s
Authentic Happiness Web site (http://www.authentichappiness.org) is a
treasure trove of resources and news on the topic.
Dr. Mikhail Csikszentmihalyi, Claremont Graduate University, is another key
thought leader. Csikszentmihalyi is the author of the best selling “Flow: The
Psychology of Optimal Experience,” as well as numerous scholarly and popular
books and articles. He led the establishment of the first positive
organizational psychology degree programs at Claremont Graduate University
and runs the university’s Quality of Life Institute. The refreshing
perspective offered by this field has a great deal of appeal and we expect
that its messages will make continuous inroads in the practices of our
profession.
Books to Read: For a general introduction to positive psychology, “A Primer
in Positive Psychology” by Christopher Peterson is an excellent general
introduction written in conversational style. Peterson and Seligman
coauthored “Character Strengths and Virtues: A Handbook and Classification,”
offering the positive psychologist’ s answer to the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual (a.k.a. DSMIII), a book widely used by psychologists and
psychiatrists to classify mental pathologies. “Positive Psychological
Assessment: A Handbook of Models and Measures” by C. R. Snyder and Shane J.
Lopez addresses the subject of testing and metrics that assess positive
psychological characteristics.
Positive Organizational Psychology
Since 2000, authors and researchers have placed quite a bit of emphasis on
positive organizational psychology as an application of this new perspective.
University of Michigan professor Kim S. Cameron, a major voice on positive
psychology in the workplace, predicts that positive organizational
scholarship will become embedded in the questions asked and the approaches
used in a wide variety of organizational studies
There are institutes, degree programs, conferences, blogs, journals, and Web
sites developing around this topic. For anyone with an interest in human
resources assessment and development, this list is worth review:
Books on Positive Organizational Psychology: Perhaps the most widely cited
book on this topic in academic literature is “Positive Organizational
Scholarship: Foundations of a New Discipline” by Kim S. Cameron.
Another work that promotes this perspective is titled “Positive
Organizational Behavior,” which is edited by Debra Nelson and Cary Cooper.
Other titles that develop this perspective include “Positive Psychology In
Business Ethics And Corporate Responsibility,” which focuses on positive
environmental ethics in business. The “Handbook of Positive Psychology” by C.
R. Snyder and Shane J. Lopez has a chapter on organizational behavior. ”
Psychological Capital: Developing the Human Competitive Edge” by Luthans,
Youssef, and Avolio explores the concept of an organization’s psychological
capital, as distinguished from the more widely known idea of human capital.
Fred Luthans is one of the most prolific authors on this topic. “Work,
Happiness and Unhappiness” by Peter Warr examines the problems of measuring
happiness at work.
In addition to the books mentioned above, other resources are shown below:
Videos on Positive Psychology: If video is your information M. O., no problem.
Visit the University of Pennsylvania Web site for a current listing. (http://
www.ppc.sas.upenn.edu/publications.htm)
Online Assessments: Visit Martin Seligman’s Authentic Happiness site to chose
from almost 20 free online assessments that relate to positive psychology.
Perhaps the most famous of these for organizational applications is the
Values in Action Signature Strengths, which measures 24 character strengths
in action. The Work-Life Questionnaire on the site measures Work-Life
Satisfaction. Please note: you must create a log-in to use any of the surveys,
but they are all free of charge.
Degree Programs: Claremont Graduate University has just launched degree
programs in positive organizational scholarship in the School of Behavioral
and Organizational Sciences. (http://www.cgu.edu/pages/4573.asp) In addition,
the Master of Applied Positive Psychology is offered at the University of
Pennsylvania and the MSc in Applied Positive Psychology is offered at the
University of East London, UK.
Institutes: The Drucker School of Management at the Claremont Graduate
University started the Quality of Life Research Center in 1999 under the
direction of Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi.
The Values in Action (VIA) Institute provides information on positive
psychology, as well as the classification system and measurement tools of
character strengths that serve as the backbone of this developing scientific
discipline.
The Centre for Applied Positive Psychology is an independent, not-for-profit
organization affiliated with the University of East London and located at the
University of Warwick campus in the UK.
The European Network for Positive Psychology is a collective of European
researchers and practitioners with shared interests in the science and
practice of positive psychology.
The Center for Positive Organizational Scholarship is located at the Stephen
M. Ross School of Business, University of Michigan.
The American Psychological Association has a Psychologically Healthy
Workplace Practice and award program.
There is a great deal of energy in this burgeoning field, and we expect its
influence on the world of industrial psychology to be very … positive!
Author: Kathleen Groll Connolly writes on a variety of human resources topics
and is a partner in Performance Programs, Inc., an organization specializing
in human resources surveys and measurement. For more information call 1-800-
565-4223. http://www.performanceprograms.com