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Organizations today, are increasingly using projects in their daily
activities. Projects and project-management principles frame goal
attainment in academia and many business sectors, and they even
serve as theoretical footing for organizational-change endeavors.
However, the ubiquity of project management does not mean that
project work, project teams, and the ways organizations use
projects are well understood. Moreover, while project-management
theory and practice aim at providing structure and control to
enable successful project completion, an alarmingly high percentage
of projects struggle or fail. As the authors of The Psychology and
Management of Project Teams explain, this is in part because
projects are still mostly managed as technical systems rather than
behavioral systems. Even though project-management researchers have
become increasingly interested in factors that may have an impact
on project-management effectiveness, their efforts fall short of
addressing the "human factor." And, unfortunately, many
project-management scholars are largely unaware of the I/O
psychology literature-relying, for example, on outdated models of
motivation and team development. On the other side, I/O
psychologists who research groups and teams often ignore the
contextual influences-such as business sector, project type,
placement in the organizational hierarchy, and project phase and
maturity-that have a crucial impact on how a project will unfold.
In this volume, a cross-disciplinary set of editors will bring
together perspectives from leading I/O psychology and
project-management scholars. The volume will include comprehensive
coverage of team selection, development, learning, motivation, and
communication; conflict management and well-being; leadership;
diversity; performance from a multi-level perspective; and career
development. In the concluding chapter, a research agenda will
provide a roadmap for an integrated approach to the study of
project teams.
Reflections takes readers on an honest journey through dealing with
fears, coming to term with illness, facing death, and acceptance.
Reflections is a gripping story written from two perspectives:
Brian Hobbs, a songwriter with a terminal cancer diagnosis with
months to live, and Fia Hobbs, his caregiving wife as well as his
therapist. They share with readers their journey through hope,
despair, and finally to peace and acceptance. During Brian's
illness, he wrote down his thoughts and feelings in a blog that
became a huge inspiration for people to let go of their own fears
and to find purpose in their own lives. Reflections is a
continuation of Brian's blog and helps to inspire readers to make
them realize what matters in life as they follow his last months.
'A marvellous miscellany of mysteries' - Simon Singh 'Hours of
arguing and puzzling. I loved it.' - Matt Parker This highly
engaging collection of 70 puzzles comes from the popular weekly
column in New Scientist magazine. You'll find puzzles that are
great for sharing with friends at a pub, problems drawn from
real-life situations, games with intriguing strategies, and puzzles
with such creative and whimsical storylines that they need to be
explained to be believed. With the solutions you'll read the untold
back stories behind the puzzles, and a fascinating exploration of
related puzzles and mathematical ideas. You'll learn why a
particular puzzle adaptation involved talking to an expert in sheep
genetics, which solution was thought up by the BBC Radio 5 Drive
team, and outside-the-box solutions to apparently straightforward
challenges. This book is a must for any lover of puzzles or
recreational mathematics.
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