Goal Displacement: Assessing the Motivation for Organizational Cheating
A major problem in assessing bureaucratic performance is the difficulty in judging the final social outcomes stemming from the work of public agencies. As a result, public agencies are frequently evaluated based on the outputs they produce. Agency outputs (such as, criminal cases solved, inspections...
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description | A major problem in assessing bureaucratic performance is the difficulty in judging the final social outcomes stemming from the work of public agencies. As a result, public agencies are frequently evaluated based on the outputs they produce. Agency outputs (such as, criminal cases solved, inspections) are easier to measure than the actual contributions agencies make to social outcomes (such as, preventing workplace discrimination, protecting the environment). When agency performance is evaluated in terms of numerical outputs, bureaucrats have an incentive to maximize outputs, regardless of whether maximizing outputs is the preferred strategy for achieving desired social outcomes (a form of goal displacement). This incentive to maximize outputs may lead to organizational cheating, in which public agencies purposely manipulate output levels to portray their work in the best light possible. This study examines the problems of goal displacement and organizational cheating in Texas public schools. Specifically, we examine the degree to which school districts cheat to manipulate student pass rates on standardized exams. School districts "cheat" by liberally exempting certain students from these exams in hopes of raising overall district pass rates. Scarce institutional resources and extreme task demands are associated with cheating. From a management perspective, this study demonstrates the problems in implementing performance standards. From an academic perspective, it provides the first theory about when and why organizations cheat. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1111/0033-3352.00075 |
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As a result, public agencies are frequently evaluated based on the outputs they produce. Agency outputs (such as, criminal cases solved, inspections) are easier to measure than the actual contributions agencies make to social outcomes (such as, preventing workplace discrimination, protecting the environment). When agency performance is evaluated in terms of numerical outputs, bureaucrats have an incentive to maximize outputs, regardless of whether maximizing outputs is the preferred strategy for achieving desired social outcomes (a form of goal displacement). This incentive to maximize outputs may lead to organizational cheating, in which public agencies purposely manipulate output levels to portray their work in the best light possible. This study examines the problems of goal displacement and organizational cheating in Texas public schools. Specifically, we examine the degree to which school districts cheat to manipulate student pass rates on standardized exams. School districts "cheat" by liberally exempting certain students from these exams in hopes of raising overall district pass rates. Scarce institutional resources and extreme task demands are associated with cheating. From a management perspective, this study demonstrates the problems in implementing performance standards. 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School districts "cheat" by liberally exempting certain students from these exams in hopes of raising overall district pass rates. Scarce institutional resources and extreme task demands are associated with cheating. From a management perspective, this study demonstrates the problems in implementing performance standards. From an academic perspective, it provides the first theory about when and why organizations cheat.</description><subject>8306</subject><subject>9130</subject><subject>9190</subject><subject>9550</subject><subject>Academic motivation</subject><subject>Articles of Interest to Academicians and Practitioners</subject><subject>Bureaucracy</subject><subject>Burglary</subject><subject>Cheating</subject><subject>Corporate bureaucracy</subject><subject>Educational administration</subject><subject>Ethical aspects</subject><subject>Evaluation</subject><subject>Experimental/theoretical</subject><subject>Goal setting</subject><subject>Government agencies</subject><subject>Government bureaucracy</subject><subject>Law enforcement</subject><subject>Limited English speaking students</subject><subject>Organizations</subject><subject>Performance evaluation</subject><subject>Policy implementation</subject><subject>Property crimes</subject><subject>Public administration</subject><subject>Public 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subjects | 8306 9130 9190 9550 Academic motivation Articles of Interest to Academicians and Practitioners Bureaucracy Burglary Cheating Corporate bureaucracy Educational administration Ethical aspects Evaluation Experimental/theoretical Goal setting Government agencies Government bureaucracy Law enforcement Limited English speaking students Organizations Performance evaluation Policy implementation Property crimes Public administration Public Agencies Public management Public policy Public schools Public sector Racial discrimination Ratings & rankings Regulatory agencies Resource Allocation Sampling bias School districts Schools Schools and educational services Social Problems Studies Texas U.S.A United States |
title | Goal Displacement: Assessing the Motivation for Organizational Cheating |
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