Organizational Roles and Change
Change As Loss
Emotional Responses to Perceived Negative Change
Emotional Responses to Perceived Positive Change
Individual Reactions to Change
100

How might a top manager’s isolation from frontline realities contribute to employee resistance during organizational change?

Because they’re disconnected from daily operations, they may overlook employee concerns and cause resistance

100

Even when it's a "good" one, this process can feel like grief, something familiar ends, something new begins, and in between lies uncertainty, anxiety, and mourning.

What is change?

100

This is the first stage of emotional response, often marked by numbness and disbelief.

What is Shock and Denial?


100

Critical point on the ride in which some people disengage or withdraw entirely

 What is Checking out?

100

According to the presentation outline, differences in how people respond to organizational change are connected to factors like personality, life stage, cognitive development, job role, and this aspect of background.


Cultural background

200

In what ways can middle managers be better supported to bridge the gap between leadership directives and staff concerns?

By giving them clear info, resources, and a voice in planning so they can support both staff and leadership.


200

People don't really resist change itself, they resist ____________.

what they lose because of the change

200

In this stage, individuals may feel anger, sadness, or frustration as they start to accept the change.

What is Resistance?

200

Stage in which people feel enthusiastic, hopeful, and focus on the benefits of change 

What is uninformed optimism?

200

People who consistently struggle with newness and only change when it’s absolutely required are described as this type of adapter.


What are late adapters

300

Why do line staff often experience the most frustration and resistance during times of change, especially in human services organizations?

They’re most affected by changes but least informed, leading to frustration and pushback.

300

According to Dent & Goldberg (1999), people don’t resist change itself—they resist losses like comfort, control, or identity, and uncertainties like not knowing what’s next or being forced into unfair situations.

What are the real reasons people resist change?

300

During the Exploration stage, these types of questions become more common as people begin to adapt.


What are “how” questions?

300

When enthusiasm drops, questioning whether change is ACTUALLY worth it?

What is Informed Pessimism?


300

Individuals who can tolerate ambiguity and see multiple perspectives are more open to change because they understand that their way is just this, not the reality.


What is “A” reality

400

How can clear communication and consistent support across all organizational levels reduce complacency and strengthen change efforts?

Clear communication builds trust, keeps everyone informed, and reduces resistance to change.

400

To support others through change, leaders and social workers should address the emotional side, offering time to grieve, honest communication, reassurance, and respect for what’s been lost.

What do people need from leaders during times of change?

400

This final stage is when people embrace new ways of working and commit to the change.

What is Commitment?

400

People see benefits of the change, feel competent and confident

What is informed optimism?

400

Cultures like Greece, Japan, and Mexico tend to prefer stability and clear rules, scoring high on this cultural measure that reflects discomfort with risk or ambiguity.


What is uncertainty avoidance

500

What strategies can leaders use to overcome the powerful forces that reinforce complacency and maintain the status quo?

By creating urgency, celebrating progress, and keeping the vision alive

500

According to Scott & Jaffe (1989), when people experience change, they often grieve losses in these five areas: security, competence, relationships, sense of direction, and territory, each triggering personal fears and uncertainty.

What are the five common areas of loss people experience during change?

500

A common behavior in the Resistance stage, this emotional response may result in missing work and negativity.

What is anger or frustration?

500

Change is fully integrated into daily practice and viewed as worthwhile

What is Completion?

500

JName a country that scores low on uncertainty avoidance.

Denmark, Canada, the U.S., Great Britain, Indonesia, and Switzerland

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