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Written in an easy-to-read conversational tone, Beyond Safety
Accountability explains how to develop an organizational culture
that encourages people to be accountable for their work practices
and to embrace a higher sense of personal responsibility. The
author begins by thoroughly explaining the difference between
safety accountability and safety responsibility. He then examines
the need of organizations to improve safety performance, discusses
why such performance improvement can be achieved through a
continuous safety process, as distinguished from a safety program,
and provides the practical tools you can use to build personal
responsibility in your workplace.
Throughout the years experts have struggled to define the term
"police culture." For most this label means a reactive approach to
keeping people safe by using punitive consequences to punish or
detain the perpetrators. The result: More attention is given to the
negative reactive side of policing than a positive proactive
approach to preventing crime by cultivating an interdependent
culture of residents looking out for the safety, health, and
well-being of each other. We believe police officers can play a
critical and integral role in achieving such a community of
compassion---an Actively Caring for People (AC4P) culture. An AC4P
culture can be fueled by AC4P Policing, and involves a paradigm
shift regarding the role and impact of "consequences." With AC4P
Policing, consequences are used to increase the quantity and
improve the quality of desired behavior. Police officers are
educated about the rationale behind using more positive than
negative consequences to manage behavior, and then they are trained
on how to deliver positive consequences in ways that help to
cultivate interpersonal trust and AC4P behavior among police
officers and the citizens they serve. This teaching/learning
process is founded on seven research-based lessons from
psychology---the science of human experience. The first three
lessons reflect the critical behavior-management fundamentals of
positive reinforcement, observational learning, and behavior-based
feedback. The subsequent four lessons are derived from humanism,
but behaviorism or ABS is essential for bringing these humanistic
principles to life. The result: humanistic behaviorism to enhance
long-term positive relations between police officers and the
citizens they serve, thereby preventing interpersonal conflict,
violence, and harm.
The lead character in this realistic story, a safety professional
for a large manufacturing company, is bullied by her boss, and she
searches to find the courage to confront him. In her search she
learns from Dr. Pitz ("Doc") the five person-states that influence
one's propensity to actively care for the safety, health, or
welfare of other people. With her coworker, Jeff, Joanne entertains
ways to enhance these five person- states: self-esteem,
self-efficacy, optimism, belongingness, and personal control. With
this profound knowledge she eventually confronts her boss and
teaches him how to be an actively caring for people leader.
This refreshing teaching/learning narrative, based on actual life
events and research-supported principles, begins with the lead
character (Joanne Cruse) losing her job as the Safety Director for
a large manufacturing company. Subsequently, her former psychology
professor, Dr. Pitz ("Doc"), invites her to try out for a position
as leadership consultant with his firm, Make-A-Difference, Inc.
(MAD) that helps companies cultivate a self-motivated and
personally-engaged workforce. Throughout her probationary period,
Joanne travels with the top consultant at MAD (Mickey Vasquez) to
visit a number of organizations struggling with various
occupational issues related to the human dynamics of
self-motivation (i.e., working to accomplish an organization's
milestone from a self-directed or self-accountability mindset). The
interpersonal and group interactions Joanne experiences at diverse
organizations, accompanied by Mickey's professional coaching,
reveal twenty practical and profound leadership lessons to nurture
an actively caring for people work culture in which employees put
forth their best efforts on behalf of their company's mission.
Many companies have taken steps to improve awareness and management
of safety systems, yet safety directors continue to report high
injury rates. In Keeping People Safe: The Human Dynamics of Injury
Prevention, author Josh Williams provides safety leaders with
information they can use to further reduce injuries and improve
workplace safety. This book addresses five integral components of
workplace safety: Systems/Conditions, Leadership, Behaviors,
People-Factors, and Communication. It recommends strategies for
every aspect of safety management from organizational commitment
and safety culture to improving managerial behavior and working
with union members. These recommendations are based on years of
practical experience, empirical research on the human dynamics of
safety, and seminal studies in social psychology on authority and
conformity. Utilizing the hugely influential and widely practiced
model of Behavior Based Safety, Williams provides the safety
manager with all the tools needed to lower injury rates and improve
safety. Numerous charts and tables, a checklist for improving
safety performance, and a foreword by world-renowned safety leader
E. Scott Geller complement the text.
This book provides a collection of 28 writings from Scott Geller's
regular column in "Industrial Safety and Hygiene News," from
Geller's associates at Safety Performance Solutions, and from the
American Society of Safety Engineers' annual conferences. Organized
into seven chapters, these writings examine real-world examples of
successful behavior-based safety programs. Readers will discover
tips on how to measure safety performance, how to get workers to
care about safety, and how to better assess and coach safety
performance using specific behavior-based tools. Readers will also
find in-depth discussions on achieving a Total Safety Culture using
such tools and techniques as actively caring, self-management,
behavior-based observation and feedback, improved communication
skills, measured safety performance, increased safety leadership,
and maximized behavior-based safety efforts.
Seven research-based lessons from psychology-the science of human
experience-inspire the development of an actively caring for people
(AC4P) culture. The education/training purpose: to enhance
long-term positive and sustainable relations between teachers,
students, school administrators, and SROs, and in turn cultivate an
optimal teaching/learning climate and prevent interpersonal
conflict and bullying behavior. Both education and training are
provided. Each research-based principle for AC4P intervention is
explained and followed by questions or scenarios to facilitate
group discussion. Behavioral exercises are given to practice each
principle and receive supportive and corrective feedback for
continuous improvement.
This volume demonstrates how readers can become more effective
parents, teachers, students, coaches, managers, or work
supervisors, while also gaining practical skills to enhance their
self-motivation, communication skills, and intervention acumen. The
first eight chapters explain evidence-based principles from applied
behavioral science (ABS) that can be used to improve the human
dynamics of any situation involving behavior. Fundamentals from
humanism are integrated strategically to show how an ABS
intervention can be more acceptable, influential, and sustainable.
The following twelve chapters detail the deployment of ABS
interventions to optimize performance in a wide variety of fields,
including occupational and transportation safety, quantity and
quality of organizational work behavior, healthcare, athletic
coaching, parenting, pre-school and college education,
environmental sustainability, and the control of obesity and
alcohol abuse. Applied Psychology provides a thorough review of the
latest research in relation to these domains and explores issues
for future investigation.
You cannot improve your organization's safety performance to enviable levels without addressing human behavior and attitude effectively. The only comprehensive reference on the psychology of the human dynamics of safety, The Psychology of Safety Handbook shows you how to apply psychology to improve safety and health in your organization. Dr. Geller provides theory, procedures, and tools to guide your organization's long-term continuous improvement.
Based on Dr. Geller's bestselling The Psychology of Safety, this new and expanded Handbook gives you everything you need to decrease the frequency and severity of accidental injuries in your organization. He covers all areas of psychology directly relevant to understanding and influencing safety-related behaviors.
Engineering interventions and government policy have made their mark on injury reduction. Now it is time to work with the human dynamics of injury prevention. The cause of most injuries can be attributed to at-risk behavior or insufficient safe behavior. The Psychology of Safety Handbook not only teaches principles and practical procedures for improving safety-related behaviors, but also illustrates how to increase people's willingness to use these techniques to create a Total Safety Culture.
For more than three decades, Professor E. Scott Geller has taught and conducted research as a faculty member of Virginia Tech's Department of Psychology. In this capacity he has authored more than 250 research articles and over 50 books or chapters addressing the development and evaluation of behavior-change interventions to improve quality of life. He has authored seven books on managing behaviors and attitudes for occupational health and safety, including The Psychology of Safety and Working Safe.
Dr. Geller is Senior Partner of Safety Performance Solutions, a leading training and consulting firm helping companies empower their employees to achieve a Total Safety Culture. He has been awarded Fellow status by the American Psychological Association, the American Psychological Society, and the World Academy of Productivity and Quality. Moreover, Scott Geller has been honored with three university-wide teaching awards - every one offered by Virginia Tech.
This volume demonstrates how readers can become more effective
parents, teachers, students, coaches, managers, or work
supervisors, while also gaining practical skills to enhance their
self-motivation, communication skills, and intervention acumen. The
first eight chapters explain evidence-based principles from applied
behavioral science (ABS) that can be used to improve the human
dynamics of any situation involving behavior. Fundamentals from
humanism are integrated strategically to show how an ABS
intervention can be more acceptable, influential, and sustainable.
The following twelve chapters detail the deployment of ABS
interventions to optimize performance in a wide variety of fields,
including occupational and transportation safety, quantity and
quality of organizational work behavior, healthcare, athletic
coaching, parenting, pre-school and college education,
environmental sustainability, and the control of obesity and
alcohol abuse. Applied Psychology provides a thorough review of the
latest research in relation to these domains and explores issues
for future investigation.
Effective Parenting and Caregiving: Practical Guidelines from
Psychological Science equips readers with education and training to
help them care most effectively for children-from infants to
toddlers and grade schoolers, and on to adolescents. This
scholarship teaches seven evidence-based life lessons-principles of
human dynamics, which when practiced regularly, help children
become healthier, happier, and more successful. Readers learn how
to employ positive consequences to effectively influence behavior
and apply the power of observational learning. They discover how to
become a successful behavior-improvement coach with supportive and
corrective feedback. They also learn how to practice empathy,
manage behavior as a servant leader, and create an environment of
mutual respect, interdependence, and interpersonal gratitude, all
helping children achieve self-actualization-the application of
personal capabilities for optimal accomplishment. Beyond this
achievement is self-transcendence-the most valuable person-state
for individuals and their social-support system. Readers learn how
to reach that ultimate vision and help others do the same.
Effective Parenting and Caregiving is an exceptional textbook for
courses within the behavioral and social sciences, especially
applied psychology and human development. It is also a valuable
guidebook for parents, caregivers, or any individual who wants to
optimize the quality of care for others at home, school, work, or
throughout the community at large.
Life Lessons from Psychological Science: Understanding and
Improving Interpersonal Dynamics provides students with a primer
for developing self-awareness and insight through interpersonal
conversation. The text focuses on human behavior in various
situations-from educational settings to the workplace and the
home-in order to help readers understand, appreciate, and enrich
the human dynamics of their everyday lives. This book features 50
life lessons grounded in contemporary research and relevant to
improving interpersonal dynamics. Several life lessons reflect the
behavioral science principles of positive versus negative
reinforcement, observational learning, and behavior-based feedback.
Other life lessons are founded on humanism, including empathy,
interdependence, systems thinking, and self-transcendence. Still
others are derived from social psychology, including six principles
of social influence, the dynamics of group decision-making, and
critical distinctions between discrimination and stereotyping.
Domains of psychology such as sensation and perception,
personality, health and stress, learning, and motivation are the
foundation of other life lessons. The lessons are complemented by
instructive and entertaining illustrations and discussion questions
to initiate lively dialogue. A dynamic, contemporary, and personal
text, Life Lessons from Psychological Science is an ideal resource
for introductory psychology courses.
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