2022-2023 Academic Catalog and Student Handbook [Archived Catalog]
Managing Organizational Systems, Ph.D.
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Return to: College of Social Sciences Degree Program Overview
The PhD in Managing Organizational Systems (MOS) explores organizational systems in their professional and global environments. It develops professionals who want to lead as distinctive members in the forefront of their fields.
Students accomplish this by learning organizational systems and much, much more, which provides a base of knowledge and skills they can use in many settings. The PhD develops strategic leaders who work in challenging situations, who need to identify and address complex problems, and who learn to collaboratively design and implement solutions that make a difference.
Today’s organizations are complex systems. Many have globally-dispersed operations and all, regardless of size, are globally influenced every day. Thus, organizations must be able to recognize and assess the forces that impact them. To thrive, they must mobilize the energy and commitment of their people as co-collaborators, as stakeholders who see themselves as leaders, and as willing participants in transformation as the world’s adaptive demands escalate. Expertise in systems-based leadership is essential to meet such demands.
The PhD curriculum equips professionals to meet such demands to envision and support the kind of systemic change needed for organizations to be resilient in their 21st Century milieu and to operate in a sustainable and socially responsive manner. It aids professionals to develop innovative, successful systems that respond to the emerging global needs for sustainability while creating the conditions for all within an organization to contribute to their full potential.
The program offers flexibility to chart a course of study that fits students’ general or specific areas of interest within the broad focus of organizational systems design and transformation, innovative leadership, collaborative management, distributive organizational behavior, and sustainability and social innovation.
Distinctive Features
Systems approaches. Courses cover subjects such as organizational systems design, organizational change models, collaborative systems operations, applied behavioral science, and systems thinking becomes a hallmark of understanding social systems and situations.
Cross-cutting relevance. The curriculum equips professionals to recognize and create necessary long-lasting social, economic, political, and structural changes by learning how to build responsive solutions with systems-oriented principles and approaches that can adapt and transfer across organizational contexts.
Real-world emphasis.
- Application-focused. Professionals develop more sophisticated systems analysis and solution-building by applying their high-level theoretical knowledge to work needed in the trenches of current issues and chosen professions.
- Crossing disciplinary boundaries. The program evolves a culture of recognizing the value of gaining knowledge and practice from multiple disciplines to inform context-specific systems interventions and to be able to communicate across professions.
- Change, adaptive innovation, and transformation. Through immersion in systems thinking and analysis, professionals recognize why 21st Century economic, environmental, and social challenges demand innovative leadership to transform people and organizations with adaptive capacities to thrive while changing the way they engage such challenges.
- The human-information-technology interface. Professionals learn to use the systems-advantage in assessing and designing information-flows and technical resources to support the efficiency and effectiveness of stakeholders at all levels of organizations and partnerships from local to global.
- Collaboration and communication. Professionals apply skills in systems thinking and analysis to drive the design and implementation of collaborative systems for diverse individuals, teams, and organizations to communicate multiple perspectives and approaches to solutions, and to coordinate their routine work and innovative initiatives.
Program Learning Outcomes
Managing Organizational Systems PhD Students will be able to:
- Assess, design, lead, manage, and evaluate complex organizational change initiatives in their chosen professions, places of work, and in the wider global community;
- Apply systems thinking to conduct environmental analysis which includes internal and external conditions, create strategies to design, deploy, and evaluate collaborative solutions for pursuing organizational and community level opportunities and challenges;
- Operate within a consistent framework of individual and collective ethics and social responsibility;
- Practice and promote self-awareness, appreciation of diversity, and constructive dialogue to initiate and maintain authentic relationships, leadership, and sustainable collaboration;
- Design and conduct systematic and systemic research that employs robust evidence-based critical analysis that is rooted in scholarship and practice (praxis).
- Distinguish, analyze, and critically assess competing leadership/followership theories and concepts;
- Integrate core theories and concepts of leadership through individual reflection and intellectual projects.
Program Requirements of all Ph.D. degrees in Managing Organizational Systems
The total doctoral degree is 60 credits. Besides the 8 research focused courses, there are 10 foundational courses in leadership, organizational behavior and systems and professional ethics, and 2 elective courses.
Residential Requirements: Participation in twice-annual, 5-day residential conferences is required until enrollment in dissertation begins (i.e., until after the completion of the 3 candidacy qualifying essays and successful completion of the essay oral exam).
Transfer Credit Policy: Transfer credits, to be considered, must have been (a) awarded by a regionally accredited university, (b) earned at the graduate level (master’s or doctoral), (c) earned at the grade level of B or better and (d) evaluated by the Department Chair as equivalent to a degree course for which a substitution is appropriate and conceptually fit with the degree program course of study. No more than 12 credits may be transferred.
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