[Ous-lp-rp13] EDAD 6020 Response to Answer #`

Ian Snyder isnyder at minfordfalcons.net
Fri Jun 8 18:18:42 EDT 2018


*The system that is most intriguing to me is the open system and the vast
amount of people that it entails. An open system includes the input and
suggestions of the community. The goals set forth from the local business
are likely to be different than those of the school system. The school
district I am associated with has an open system made up primarily of
agricultural based income that hold different values at a higher level than
the board of education and administration. Nicholas Turon:Rational systems
are unified groups with one shared goal. The leader is the focus of this
system.  Managerial responsibilities of the leader are most valued and
transactional relationships are the norm. Examples of rational systems in
schools are cafeterias and transportation departments.  Tasks are very
clearly defined.Natural Systems, in contrast, may not have one shared goal.
The system is made up groups with varying, and maybe even conflicting,
goals. As such the focus is mainly the people who exist in the system. In a
school, for example, natural systems exist between the teachers or
departments.Open systems are bound together almost purely based on the
environment and not by shared goals.  For example, the community
surrounding a school district would be a part of an open system where goals
are vastly different. Local businesses may have much different goals for
the school district than the neighboring family, or the bachelor who lives
across the street.*
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