Professionals in Organizations: Debunking a Myth
By (Author) Mary E. Guy
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
15th May 1985
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Careers guidance
Organizational theory and behaviour
658.3044
Hardback
208
Organization theories have given only brief attention to the role of professionals in the workplace. When mentioned, it is posited that major differences exist between professionals and nonprofessionals owing their loyalties more to their discipline/profession than to the organization for which they work. For this reason professionals are thought to be a breed apart who must be treated differently by administrators. Guy, basing her conclusions on studies conducted at two hospitals, shows that these assumptions are not completely true. She finds that the urgency of the task at hand determines priorities much more than does professional identification. She also found that many professionals within an organization had as much in common with staff from other disciplines as they had with professional colleagues. These findings have important ramifications for managers, program planners and researchers in organizational behavior.
MARY E. GUY is Collins Professor of Public Administration at the Askew School of Public Administration & Policy, Florida State Univerity Her previous works include Professionals in Organizations: Debunking a Myth, as well as articles in publications such as Group and Organization Studies, Hospital and Health Services Administration, and the New England Journal of Human Services.