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>Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2000 09:51:51 -0500
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>From: Tim Rourke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: Historical Context of the Work Ethic C
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>The Work Ethic in America
>
>Although the Protestant ethic became a significant factor in shaping the
>culture and society of Europe after the sixteenth century, its impact
>did not eliminate the social hierarchy which gave status to those whose
>wealth allowed exemption from toil and made gentility synonymous with
>leisure (Rodgers, 1978). The early adventurers who first found America
>were searching, not for a place to work and build a new land, but for a
>new Eden where abundance and riches would allow them to follow
>Aristotle's instruction that leisure was the only life fitting for a
>free man. The New England Puritans, the Pennsylvania Quakers, and others
>of the Protestant sects, who eventually settled in America, however,
>came with no hopes or illusions of a life of ease.
>
>The early settlers referred to America as a wilderness, in part because
>they sought the spiritual growth associated with coming through the
>wilderness in the Bible (Rodgers, 1978). From their viewpoint, the moral
>life was one of hard work and determination, and they approached the
>task of building a new world in the wilderness as an opportunity to
>prove their own moral worth. What resulted was a land preoccupied with
>toil.
>
>When significant numbers of Europeans began to visit the new world in
>the early 1800's, they were amazed with the extent of the transformation
>(Rodgers, 1978). Visitors to the northern states were particularly
>impressed by the industrious pace. They often complained about the lack
>of opportunities for amusement, and they were perplexed by the lack of a
>social strata dedicated to a life of leisure.
>
>Work in preindustrial America was not incessant, however. The work of
>agriculture was seasonal, hectic during planting and harvesting but more
>relaxed during the winter months. Even in workshops and stores, the pace
>was not constant. Changing demands due to the seasons, varied
>availability of materials, and poor transportation and communication
>contributed to interruptions in the steadiness of work. The work ethic
>of this era did not demand the ceaseless regularity which came with the
>age of machines, but supported sincere dedication to accomplish those
>tasks a person might have before them. The work ethic "was not a certain
>rate of business but a way of thinking" (Rodgers, 1978, p. 19).
>
>
>
>The Work Ethic and the Industrial Revolution
>
>As work in America was being dramatically affected by the industrial
>revolution in the mid-nineteenth century, the work ethic had become
>secularized in a number of ways. The idea of work as a calling had been
>replaced by the concept of public usefulness. Economists warned of the
>poverty and decay that would befall the country if people failed to work
>hard, and moralists stressed the social duty of each person to be
>productive (Rodgers, 1978). Schools taught, along with the alphabet and
>the spelling book, that idleness was a disgrace. The work ethic also
>provided a sociological as well as an ideological explanation for the
>origins of social hierarchy through the corollary that effort expended
>in work would be rewarded (Gilbert, 1977).
>
>Some elements of the work ethic, however, did not bode well with the
>industrial age. One of the central themes of the work ethic was that an
>individual could be the master of his own fate through hard work. Within
>the context of the craft and agricultural society this was true. A
>person could advance his position in life through manual labor and the
>economic benefits it would produce. Manual labor, however, began to be
>replaced by machine manufacture and intensive division of labor came
>with the industrial age. As a result, individual control over the
>quantity and methods of personal production began to be removed
>(Gilbert, 1977).
>
>The impact of industrialization and the speed with which it spread
>during the second half of the nineteenth century was notable. Rodgers
>(1978) reported that as late as 1850 most American manufacturing was
>still being done in homes and workshops. This pattern was not confined
>to rural areas, but was found in cities also where all varieties of
>craftsmen plied their trades. Some division of labor was utilized, but
>most work was performed using time-honored hand methods. A certain
>measure of independence and creativity could be taken for granted in the
>workplace. No one directly supervised home workers or farmers, and in
>the small shops and mills, supervision was mostly unstructured. The
>cotton textile industry of New England was the major exception.
>
>Rodgers (1978) described the founding, in the early 1820's, of Lowell,
>Massachusetts as the real beginning of the industrial age in America. By
>the end of the decade, nineteen textile mills were in operation in the
>city, and 5,000 workers were employed in the mills. During the years
>that followed, factories were built in other towns as competition in the
>industry grew. These cotton mills were distinguished from other
>factories of the day by their size, the discipline demanded of their
>workers, and the paternalistic regulations imposed on employees
>(Rodgers, 1978). Gradually the patterns of employment and management
>initiated in the cotton mills spread to other industries, and during the
>later half of the nineteenth century, the home and workshop trades were
>essentially replaced by the mass production of factories.
>
>In the factories, skill and craftsmanship were replaced by discipline
>and anonymity. A host of carefully preserved hand trades--tailoring,
>barrel making, glass blowing, felt-hat making, pottery making, and shoe
>making--disappeared as they were replaced by new inventions and
>specialization of labor (Rodgers, 1978). Although new skills were needed
>in some factories, the trend was toward a semiskilled labor force,
>typically operating one machine to perform one small piece of a
>manufacturing process. The sense of control over one's destiny was
>missing in the new workplace, and the emptiness and lack of intellectual
>stimulation in work threatened the work ethic (Gilbert, 1977). In the
>secularized attitudes which comprised the work ethic up until that time,
>a central component was the promise of psychological reward for efforts
>in one's work, but the factory system did little to support a sense of
>purpose or self-fulfillment for those who were on the assembly lines.
>
>The factory system also threatened the promise of economic
>reward--another key premise of the work ethic. The output of products
>manufactured by factories was so great that by the 1880's industrial
>capacity exceeded that which the economy could absorb (Rodgers, 1978).
>Under the system of home and workshop industries, production had been a
>virtue, and excess goods were not a problem. Now that factories could
>produce more than the nation could use, hard work and production no
>longer always provided assurance of prosperity.
>
>In the first half of the twentieth century, the industrial system
>continued to dominate work in America and much of the rest of the world.
>Technology continued to advance, but innovation tended to be focused on
>those areas of manufacture which had not yet been mastered by machines.
>Little was done to change the routine tasks of feeding materials into
>automated equipment or other forms of semiskilled labor which were more
>economically done by low wage workers (Rodgers, 1978).
>
>
>
>The Work Ethic and Industrial Management
>
>Management of industries became more systematic and structured as
>increased competition forced factory owners to hold costs down. The
>model of management which developed, the traditional model, was
>characterized by a very authoritarian style which did not acknowledge
>the work ethic. To the contrary, Daft and Steers (1986) described this
>model as holding "that the average worker was basically lazy and was
>motivated almost entirely by money (p. 93)." Workers were assumed to
>neither desire nor be capable of autonomous or self-directed work. As a
>result, the scientific management concept was developed, predicated on
>specialization and division of jobs into simple tasks. Scientific
>management was claimed to increase worker production and result in
>increased pay. It was therefore seen as beneficial to workers, as well
>as to the company, since monetary gain was viewed as the primary
>motivating factor for both.
>
>As use of scientific management became more widespread in the early
>1900's, it became apparent that factors other than pay were significant
>to worker motivation. Some workers were self-starters and didn't respond
>well to close supervision and others became distrustful of management
>when pay increases failed to keep pace with improved productivity (Daft
>and Steers, 1986). Although unacknowledged in management practice, these
>were indicators of continued viability of the work ethic in employees.
>
>By the end of World War II scientific management was considered
>inadequate and outdated to deal with the needs of industry (Jaggi,
>1988). At this point the behaviorist school of thought emerged to
>provide alternative theories for guiding the management of workers.
>Contrary to the principles of scientific management, the behaviorists
>argued that workers were not intrinsically lazy. They were adaptive. If
>the environment failed to provide a challenge, workers became lazy, but
>if appropriate opportunities were provided, workers would become
>creative and motivated.
>
>In response to the new theories, managers turned their attention to
>finding various ways to make jobs more fulfilling for workers. Human
>relations became an important issue and efforts were made to make people
>feel useful and important at work. Company newspapers, employee awards,
>and company social events were among the tools used by management to
>enhance the job environment (Daft and Steers, 1986), but the basic
>nature of the workplace remained unchanged. The adversarial relationship
>between employee and employer persisted.
>
>In the late 1950's job enrichment theories began to provide the basis
>for fundamental changes in employer-employee relationships. Herzberg,
>Mausner, and Snyderman (1959) identified factors such as achievement,
>recognition, responsibility, advancement, and personal growth which,
>when provided as an intrinsic component of a job, tended to motivate
>workers to perform better. Factors such as salary, company policies,
>supervisory style, working conditions, and relations with fellow workers
>tended to impair worker performance if inadequately provided for, but
>did not particularly improve worker motivation when present.
>
>In 1960, when the concepts of theory "X" and theory "Y" were introduced
>by McGregor, the basis for a management style conducive to achieving job
>enrichment for workers was provided (Jaggi, 1988). Theory "X" referred
>to the authoritarian management style characteristic of scientific
>management but theory "Y" supported a participatory style of management.
>
>
>Jaggi (1988) defined participatory management as "a cooperative process
>in which management and workers work together to accomplish a common
>goal (p. 446)." Unlike authoritarian styles of management, which
>provided top-down, directive control over workers assumed to be
>unmotivated and in need of guidance, participatory management asserted
>that worker involvement in decisionmaking provided valuable input and
>enhanced employee satisfaction and morale. Yankelovich and Immerwahr
>(1984) described participatory management as a system which would open
>the way for the work ethic to be a powerful resource in the workplace.
>They stated, however, that the persistence of the traditional model in
>American management discouraged workers, even though many wanted to work
>hard and do good work for its own sake.
>



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