Originally educated as a social-organizational psychologist (Ph.D., University of TexaAustin), Dr. Burke is currently engaged in teaching, research, and consulting. He teaches leadership, organizational dynamics and theory, and organization change and consultation. His research focuses on multirater feedback, leadership, learning agility, and organization change. Dr. Burke's consulting experience has been with a variety of organizations in business-industry, education, government, religious, medical systems, and professional services firms, including British Airways, SmithKline Beecham, National Westminster Bancorp, British Broadcasting Corporation, Business Consultants, Inc. of Japan (since 1972); Pricewaterhouse Coopers Consulting, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Dime Savings Bank, and Miller and Chevalier law firm. He formerly served as senior advisor to the strategy and organization change practice of IBM Global Business Services. Prior to his move to Teachers College, Dr. Burke was professor of management and chair of the Department of Management at Clark University. Prior to the Clark assignment, Dr. Burke was an independent consultant from 1974 to 1976. For eight years he was a full-time professional with the NTL Institute for Applied Behavioral Science, where he was director for Executive Programs and director of the Center for Systems Development (1966-1974). For eight years beginning in 1967 he also served as the executive director of the Organization Development Network Dr. Burke is a Fellow of the Academy of Management, the Association for Psychological Science, and the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology. He has served on the Board of Governors of the Academy of Management and the American Society for Training and Development, and he is a Diplomate in organizational and business consulting psychology, American Board of Professional Psychology. From 1979 to 1985 he was editor of Organizational Dynamics, and from 1986 to 1989 he started and served as editor of the Academy of Management Executive. Dr. Burke is the author of more than 150 articles and book chapters on organization development, training, change and organizational psychology, and conference planning; and author, co-author, editor, and co-editor of 19 books. His latest book published by Sage is Organization Change: Theory and Practice, 4th Ed. He designed and served as faculty director of the Columbia Business School executive program "Leading and Managing People" from 1988 to 1995. In 1989 he received the Public Service Medal from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, in 1990 the Distinguished Contribution to Human Resource Development Award and in 1993 the Organization Development Professional Practice Area Award for Excellence - The Lippitt Memorial Award - from the American Society for Training and Development. Dr. Burke has also served on three committees for the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences (1994-2012). August of 2003 he received the Distinguished Scholar-Practitioner Award from the Academy of Management, and in October of 2003, he was the recipient of the Organization Development Network's Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2004 he was appointed Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence for the Management Consulting Division of the Academy of Management, and in 2005 and 2010 he received the Linkage Corporation's Lifetime Achievement Award for leadership in the field of organization development. Also in 2005, he became the co-director of the Eisenhower Leadership Development Program, an MA in organizational psychology joint program between Teachers College and the United States Military Academy at West Point. Also in collaboration with the U.S. Army War College, Dr. Burke is responsible for a one-year fellowship program for U.S. Army Colonels. In April, 2007, he received the Distinguised Lifetime Contribution to Practice Award from the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, and in 2011 the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Best Practice Institute. His most recent book is the 3rd edition of Organization Development: A Process of Learning and Changing (2015; Pearson Education) now co-authored with Debra Noumair. On May 19, 2016, Dr.Burke was given The Outstanding Civilian Service Medal Award from the Department of the Army for his work with the United States Military Academy at West Point.
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Chapter 1: Sources for Understanding Organization Change Introduction and Overview A Short Story of Launching Organization Change Chapter 2: Rethinking Organization Change The Paradox of Planned Organization Change Making the Case for Organization Change Personal Declarations and Points of View A Closing Request Chapter 3. A Brief History of Organization Change Scientific Management The Hawthorne Studies Industrial Psychology Survey Feedback Sensitivity Training Sociotechnical Systems Organization Development The Managerial Grid and Organization Development Coercion and Confrontation Management Consulting Chapter 4: Theoretical Foundations of Organizations and Organization Change Open-System Theory Characteristics of Open Systems Organization Change Is Systemic Toward a Deeper Understanding of Organization Change Capra's Three Criteria for Understanding Life Implications for Organizations and Organization Change Chapter 5: The Nature of Organization Change Revolutionary Change Evolutionary Change Revolutionary Change: Case Example Evolutionary Change: Case Example Chapter 6: Levels of Organization Change: Individual, Group, and Larger System Change in Organizations at the Individual Level Individual Responses to Organization Change Change in Organizations at the Group Level Group Responses to Organization Change Change in Organizations at the Larger-System Level System Responses to Organization Change Chapter 7: Organization Change: Research and Theory Reviews of Organization Change Research Recent Approaches to Research and Theory Organization Models Organization Change Theory Current Thinking on Organization Change and Research Chapter 8: Conceptual Models for Understanding Organization Change Content: What to Change Process: How to Change-A Theoretical Framework Process: How to Change-Practice Frameworks Mini-Theories Related to Organization Change The Content and Process of Strategic Change in Organizations Strategies for Effecting Change in Human Systems Chapter 9: Integrated Models for Understanding Organizations and for Leading and Managing Change What Is an Organizational Model? Why Use an Organizational Model? Organizational Models and Organization Change A Comparison of the Three Models Chapter 10: The Burke-Litwin Causal Model of Organization Performance and Change Background The Model Support for the Model's Validity Chapter 11: Organizational Culture Change Experiencing Organizational Culture The British Airways Story: A Case of Culture Change You Don't Change Culture by Trying to Change the Culture A Theoretical Summary of the British Airways Story Chapter 12: Understanding and Working With Loosely Coupled Systems The Case of Change at the A. K. Rice Institute Organizational Structure and Loosely Coupled Systems Loosely Coupled Systems Chapter 13: Those Other Organizations Chapter 14: Transformational Leadership Does Leadership Matter? On Defining Leadership Toward Further Definition Characteristics of Executive Leadership Howard Gardner's Leading Minds Howard Gardner's Changing Minds Chapter 15: Leading Organization Change Phases of Organization Change and the Leader's Role The Prelaunch Phase The Launch Phase Postlaunch: Further Implementation Sustaining the Change Chapter 16: Organization Change: Summary and Integration Applying The Tipping Point Principles to Planned Organization Change Changing the Organization Successful Processes of Organization Change Positive Organization Change The Look of Change Chapter 17: Organization Change: What We Need to Know The Process of Organization Change Organization Change Leadership Organizational Structure Formal and Informal Rewards Training and Development Teams and Teamwork in Organizations Organizational Size Organizational Performance Learning Priorities Moving Forward Conclusion