Managing Human Behavior in Public and Nonprofit Organizations is the first core textbook specifically written for the management and organizational behavior course taught in undergraduate and graduate programs in public administration, particularly in Masters in Public Administration (MPA) programs. Designed to help students develop the skills and understanding they need in order to become effective and responsible public managers, the book covers all of the essential topics in management and organizational behavior from the perspective of public and non-profit management.
Dehardts defines organization behavior as the study of how people behave in public organizations. In organization behavior, the starting point is the individual. While organization behavior deals with the different areas of management and organizations, it views this study from the perceptive of people. This theory has five components - behavior is purposeful and can be managed by others; behavior is caused, not random, and if management studies patterns, they can gain insight to those individuals; behavior changes through learning; and people have value, regardless of their contributions to the organization. The remaining component is public service has its focus on serving others. This focus must realize people have a special calling to public service when observing organization behavior in public administration.
There wasn't anything earth-shattering in this book, and it spends most of its time rehashing existing theories and rubrics of everything from creativity to decision making to communication. It doesn't even seem particularly focused on public & nonprofit organizations, really, but appropriate for organizations of all kinds. What it does, though, is keep things simple, direct, and meaningful. Denhardt's characteristic writing style is clear without being overly folksy, yet endearing enough to be meaningful. It was a quick read, overall, and I did take away some important points from it, but mainly this felt like an exhaustive summary of other texts I've already had to read.
This book had the most carryover from public management to business management, so I'll be recommending it a lot to friends. I can tell that at least one of the authors knew a little bit about pedagogy. Some of the activities and questions were actually really good. And I found some dynamite material to use in my dissertation.
This is a great book -- even outside a classroom. You can't manage people if you don't know who you are, and so there are a lot of self-guided quizzes that correlate to various topics in managing human beings: motivation, conflict resolution, task processes. A great read.
This was awful, even by textbook standards. Dry and not interesting enough to read more than a few pages and I barely finished it because of that. Tiny print and few charts or graphs to aid in comprehension. If you have a choice, skip this one.