Classical
Classical
Classical
• Planning
• Organizing
• Staffing
• Directing
• Coordinating
• Reporting
• Budgeting
Until the mid- to late s, any treatment of management in public admin-
istration was essentially an elaboration of POSDCORB. Often combined with
an essentially scalar, or hierarchical, theory of organization, these principles of
management had a kind of commonsense quality that was appealing to practicing
public administrators as well as to those studying the field or preparing for prac-
tice. Early criticisms of the principles said they were top-down, they were essen-
tially prescriptive, and they underemphasized natural forms of cooperation—but
they formed the core of the field. From the s to the s, important mod-
ifications and adaptations were made to the principles of scientific management.
Chester Barnard () identified and set out the acceptance theory of authority,
which argues that authority does not depend as much on persons of authority or
on persons having authority as it depends on the willingness of others to accept
or comply with directions or commands. In classic theory, it was argued that pol-
icy, instructions, guidance, and authority flowed down the hierarchy, and com-
munication (what we would now call feedback) flowed up. Barnard demonstrated
that considerable power accumulated at the base of the hierarchy, and that theories
of effective management needed to be modified to account for the culture of work
in an organization, the preferences and attitudes of the workers, and the extent to
which there was agreement between workers’ needs and interests and management
policy and direction. He described the “functions of the executive” as having less
to do with the formal principles of administration and more to do with securing
workers’ cooperation through effective communication, through workers’ partic-
ipation in production decisions, and through a demonstrated concern for workers’
interests. In a sense, then, authority is delegated upward rather than directed
downward.
Another modification to the principles of scientific management came as the
result of the Hawthorne studies. These describe the Hawthorne effect, which ex-
plains worker productivity as a function of observers’ attention rather than phys-
ical or contextual factors. Subsequent interpretations of the Hawthorne effect
suggest that mere attention by observers is too simplistic, and that workers saw in
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the experiments altered forms of supervision that they preferred and that caused
productivity to increase (Greenwood and Wrege ). The Hawthorne experi-
ments and the work of Barnard introduced a human relations approach that for-
ever changed management theory. Classical principles of scientific management
and formal hierarchical structure were challenged by the human relations school
of management theory, a body of theory particularly influenced by Douglas Mc-
Gregor (). McGregor’s Theory X and Theory Y represented an especially im-
portant change in management theory. Here are the competing assumptions of
Theory X and Theory Y:
theory x assumptions
. The average person dislikes work and will try to avoid it.
. Most people need to be coerced, controlled, directed, and threatened with
punishment to get them to work toward organizational goals.
. The average person wants to be directed, shuns responsibility, has little am-
bition, and seeks security above all.
theory y assumptions
. Most people do not inherently dislike work; the physical effort and the men-
tal effort involved are as natural as play or rest.
. People will exercise self-direction and self-control to reach goals to which
they are committed; external control and the threat of punishment are not
the only means for ensuring effort toward goals.
. Commitment to goals is a function of the rewards available, particularly re-
wards that satisfy esteem and self-actualization needs.
. When conditions are favorable, the average person learns not only to accept
but also to seek responsibility.
. Many people have the capacity to exercise a high degree of creativity and
innovation in solving organizational problems.
. The intellectual potential of most individuals is only partially used in most
organizations.
From the late s through the mid-s, little serious theoretical work was
done on management in public administration. The subject gradually disappeared
in the texts as well as in the pages of the Public Administration Review. The irony
is, of course, that management continued to be the core of public administration
practice. It is no wonder that during this period there was a growing distance be-
tween public administration scholarship and theory and public administration
practice.
During this period, fortunately, a strong interest in management theory in so-
ciology, social psychology, and business administration continued. Much of this
work was in the so-called middle-range theories, particularly group theory, role
theory, and communications theory. More recently, this past decade has seen a re-
birth in interest in management in public administration, with the prolific work
of those involved with the Texas Education Excellence Project. The contributions
of this literature are reviewed later.
Further, a revitalization of scientific management has started, with new empir-
ical attention to Simon’s critique of Gulick’s POSDCORB-derived management
principles. Kenneth Meier and John Bohte () offer and test a theory that
links span of control (the number of subordinates managed by a single supervisor)
to bureaucratic performance. Interestingly, Meier and Bohte conclude that both
Simon and Gulick were right. Simon’s critique that there is no single correct span
of control was supported, but so was Gulick’s principle that smaller spans of con-
trol are preferable when the authority has more information and skill than the
subordinates. Meier and Bohte () followed this study with another that ex-
amined diversification of function, stability, and space, which Gulick viewed as
the three important determinants of span of control. Gulick’s hypotheses were
supported, but Meier and Bohte found that span of control needs to be thought
of within the context of organizational hierarchy: What matters for span of control
at one level of an organization may not matter at another. This research suggests
that the insights and utility of Gulick’s management principles are far from over.
Group Theory
Theories of groups are primarily theories of organization rather than theories of
management, but group theory has important implications for public manage-
ment. Most of these implications have to do with contrasting approaches to man-
agerial control. In classic management theory, control is exercised by policy, rules,
regulations, and oversight. In group theory, the effective group will develop shared
goals and values, norms of behavior, customs, and traditions (Homans ; Shaw
). Effective management in the context of group theory nurtures, cultivates,
and supports group goals and norms that are compatible with and supportive of