These words have a purpose to be found. To be discovered, absorbed, understood, accepted, and shared.
Random Rambling Rants
- Laayla
- Houston, Texas, United States
- I'm Laayla. I ramble. I rant. I question. I complain... and sometimes I happen to enlighten.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Friday, September 28, 2012
Eminem: Marshall Mathers LP
Probably one of the best albums out there. MMLP: Marshall Mathers LP. If you disagree, I don't know what to say to you other than that I probably don't care for what else you have to say anyways. If you don't have enough sense to recognize the talent and skills this man possesses, despite whether you agree with what he says or not, then I have nothing else to say to you. All I'm going to reiterate is that this is an album I can listen to, nonstop, for hours. The intensity, the depth behind every track, the focus and the details, I don't know how someone can get themselves to not appreciate it. Eminem is a genius. That's that.
Disorder.
I kid you not. I have accumulated so much that I am crashing. I no longer can prioritize what is important and what is not. Just when I think I have got it, bits and pieces scatter like ants. I have this unstable mind and this lethargic way of living. I do hope that I can start organizing my thoughts. I find difficult what once was too simple. I was risky and quick. I didn't doubt myself. I acted because I believed I knew. Now, I rethink it. I stop. I pause. I stutter. I shake my head and I get it all wrong. I become all wrong. So wrong.
I have to change.
I have to change.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Small details.
When we begin to concentrate on the smallest things in life, we don't notice the main picture. We tend to ignore the whole. We are so embedded in every corner, we don't look at the path we're taking. Maybe it's time to stop and look around. It can't set us back. We're not even moving forward. So let's stop. Let's see it as a whole, not as pieces. Maybe we can understand this world a bit better.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Industrial Organizational Psychology in Employee of the Month
Industrial
Organizational
Psychology in
Employee of the Month
Employee of the Month
Laayla M. Tariq
November 18, 2011
Psych 3310
University of Houston
I.
Introduction
Industrial
organizational psychology is demonstrated throughout the media in variety of
ways in television series, cartoons, and movies. Employee of the Month is a comedy film that reveals the underlying
complications between employees of a retail store, “Super Club.” The main character, Zach, is a slacker who has
no ambition to accomplish any goals at work. Zach is constantly annoyed by his
over-achieving co-worker, Vince, who is always stealing attention from upper
management. One day Zach learns that an attractive female, Amy, has been newly
employed and she only dates ambition men who become employee of the month. While
Zach suddenly finds himself wanting to improve his working habits, he realizes
that he will be challenged at every step by Vince, who has been known as the
employee of the month for the last 17 consecutive months and who also plans to
win Amy. Zach’s friendly co-workers become his words of encouragement as they
point out, “Wow, that's gotta hurt. I mean, he's always doin' that to you.
Stealing your thunder” – Lon. The two find themselves fighting for
golden stars, which are rewarded on a weekly basis for the best employee. Eventually,
Zach’s friends estrange him as they complain that he has changed from a kind
hearted man to a rude and selfish man who would do anything to win, like Vince.
Zach accidently gets his friend Iqbal fired and upsets Amy as he discovers that
she actually transferred jobs because her ex-boyfriend was an employee of the
month and was rude and egotistical. Therefore, Zach ends up taking the blame
for Iqbal getting fired, resigning, and apologizing to Amy. His resignation was
found not legit and he competed against Vince for the fastest check-out cashier
title. As he loses, it was discovered, on camera, that Vince cheated as he
would not scan all the items, causing the company great loss. Vince is fired
and Zach wins the title for employee of the month along with Amy’s heart and
his friends. This movie is composed of many industrial organization constructs but
this paper will reveal constructs of motivation, bullying, counter work
behavior, and stress.
II.
Application
of Industrial Organization
Motivation
Motivation
is a construct related to industrial organization and was explained as one of
the three direct determinants of job performance by Campbell in Campbell’s
hierarchical model of job performance (Campbell, 1990a; Campbell, McHenry, and
Wise, 1990; Campbell & Zook, 1990). Motivation is defined as the
“conditions responsible for variations in intensity, persistence, quality, and
direction of ongoing behavior.” (Landy & Conte, 2010) A worker’s
effectiveness and productivity is directly dependent on how motivated the
worker feels at work. Being motivated to produce the best results will also
produce quality work and help the employee stay persistent. Most work places
will set goals for employees to accomplish and reward them once they do. What motivates the employee can vary from
different situations and can become responsible for any ongoing behavior, such
as causing the employee to become content and satisfied or unhappy and
unpleasant to be around.
Zach’s
lazy behavior is directly related to his lack of motivation to achieve any
goals at work. Obviously, receiving golden stars and becoming employee of the
month did not matter to him since he did not see any rewards that he could
potentially care for. This all changed when he found something to fight for: Amy’s
affection. Clearly in this case, Zach
felt motivated to work harder by changing his working habits such as arriving
on time and helping customers find their items. As he won stars on a weekly
basis, he became more encouraged that he could actually win the title after
all. Zach’s date with Amy motivated him not to give up and keep fighting for
the title so he can win Amy’s heart and stop Vince from stealing Amy. Appraisal
from upper management also played as great motivation for Zach to do better at
work. He was eventually awarded with the key to the “cashier lounge.” This
lounge, embellished with TV, free food, recliners, poker table, and air
conditioning, motivated Zach stay as a cashier and take breaks in this lounge,
rather than with his friends on one of the upper shelves in the store aisles. Being
awarded a car for becoming employee of the month also motivated Zach to win
since he lives with his grandmother and has to ride his bike everywhere.
Counterproductive Work
Behavior
Counterproductive
Work Behavior (CWB) is also one of the constructs related to industrial
organization that is displayed throughout Employee
of the Month. Counterproductive Work Behavior is defined as “voluntary
behavior that violates important organizational norms and threatens the
well-being of the organization, its members, or even both.” (Landy & Conte,
2010). According to Robinson and Bennett, there are two types of CWB: “deviance
directed toward the organization” and “deviance directed toward other
individuals.” (Landy & Conte, 2010). Compared to OCB, which is
organizational citizenship behavior that reflects behavior that goes beyond
what is expected, CWB is exactly the opposite. CWB is composed of negative
behaviors that may risk the company profit, co-workers harm, and cause
management to become troubled with the individual behaving in the negative way.
Vardi and Weiner distinguished three types of CWB behavior: “self gain such as
theft, organizational gain such as misstating profit, and destructive such as
assault or sabotage.” (Landy & Conte, 2010). According to Sackett and
Devore’s hierarchical model of deviance, the two main CWB are interpersonal
deviance and organizational deviance. Interpersonal relates to harassment,
gossip, verbal abuse, and fighting.
Organizational deviance splits into two lower level categories of CWB,
property deviance and production deviance. Property deviance relates to theft,
property damage and sabotage as the latter relates to absence, tardiness, long
breaks, and sloppy work. (Landy & Conte, 2010).
Zach’s
actions at the start of the movie can be labeled as counterproductive work
behavior. Zach would constantly arrive to work late, skate around the aisles, take
long breaks with his friends on the shelves and treat the place as his secret
hanging out place. He would not clean up
after himself and he wouldn’t work harder to accomplish any goals. Instead, he
would lie to management about working hard and would end up convincing other co
workers to do the work for him. He would verbally abuse Vince at any given
point and would tease him such as scribbling on Vince’s employee of the month’s
picture. Since Zach would not work hard, neither would his friends, and this
negative behavior would continue on. Zach and his friends would booby trap the
stores at times in attempts to hurt Vince, who would always find a way to get
back at them. This game of taking revenge would take up Zach’s time where he
could be using that same time to achieve goals at work. Zach would play games
with his friends all the time and also discourage them from working hard as
well. Zach would also bribe the lady in records every time he needed some
information that he wouldn’t be able to obtain, legally. For example, he was
able to obtain Amy’s file by bribing the lady in records with some broken
butter fingers. Lying and cheating in such a manner directly relates to the CWB
in organizational psychology.
Stressors
Employees always face
all sorts of stressors at their work place and respond to them in many
different ways. Stressors are defined as, “physical or psychological demands to
which an individual responds.” (Landy & Conte, 2010) Reactions to these stressors are known as
strains, such as someone crying, panicking, or shouting. (Copper et al., 2001;
Quick, Quick, Nelson, & Hurrell, 1997) Common stressors at work can be
extreme temperatures, the amount of workload, situational constraints,
emotional labor, difficult work schedule, perceived control, and interpersonal
demands and conflicts. (Landy & Conte, 2010). The more stress an employee
experiences, depends on the amount of stressors involving in that employee’s
every day shift. For example, someone’s workload might make them feel exhausted
and discouraged from wanting to take on a “do more attitude.” Someone who might
be content with the work load but might be in an uncomfortable work environment
either due to extreme temperatures or excessive noise might not be able to
concentrate thoroughly and might produce lesser quality work. There are many determinants
of the kind of stressors employees face at work, resulting in different
consequences. Physical consequences such as arthritis and headaches or
psychological consequences such as depression and anxiety will eventually
become apparent. (Cooper et al., 2011; De Jonge & Dormann, 2006).
In the movie, Zach’s boss shows great strains such as
panicking, shouting, and suddenly hiring Zach as the back-up cashier when he
finds out that his brother, also his regional manager, is coming to evaluate
him at the very last minute. Zach’s boss fears that he would not pass the
evaluation since he is confident that his brother will do anything to dramatize
any faults, Zach’s boss starts hyperventilating and holds an emergency meeting
with his employees. He demands that everyone acts in the best manner as
possible and he state show his blood pressure is increasing. Zach’s boss’s
blood pressure rising shows the physical and medical consequence of stress. Vince
also shows sign of stress as he notices that Zach is finally becoming better at
his job and is obtaining weekly golden stars for being the better employee.
Vince starts to become angry and viewers are led to view Vince’s emotional
breakdown as he begins to daydream that he will lose all the respect from his co-workers
and will eventually get fired.
Bullying
Bullying
is displayed throughout many movies, as most people are familiar with the term
from personal experience as well. Bullying can be defined as, “harassing,
offending, socially excluding, or assigning embarrassing tasks to someone of
subordinate status repeatedly and over a long period of time.” (Landy &
Conte, 2010). Bullying is widespread and can be seen as the escalation of a
conflict in an organizational setting. (Leymann, 1996; Zapf & Gross, 2001)
Interestingly, the United States is known as an individualistic country where
each person is left to fend for himself and throughout the decades, bullying in
a work place was ignored to a large extent (Landy & Conte, 2010). Bullying
behaviors increase violence in a work place and cause individuals to react in
counterproductive work behavior.
In
the movie, Zach is bullied by Vince’s friend who tries to make Zach look like a
bad individual in front of Amy. Vince himself insults Zach on a daily basis,
emphasizing how inferior he is to him since Vince has won the employee of the
month title so often. Vince also belittles Zach because Zach is not a lead
cashier like Vince, but instead a simply stock boy. As long as Zach isn’t
promoted to cashier status, Vince is content with bullying him and harassing
him for being a “loser.” Vince makes fun of the fact that Zach lives with his
grandmother, doesn’t have enough money, and is surprised at the fact that Amy
went out on a date with Zach and actually liked it. Zach also bullies Vince
once the competition between the two intensifies. Zach starts to booby trap
Vince’s equipments such as breaking his scanner gun. Zach also insults Vince
for not having any friends and being too obsessed with the title of employee of
the month. This bullying increases the violence in the work place, where other
co workers become emotionally hurt, such as Amy.
III Movie Opinion
The director did a great job with examining the issues at
hand. The director did portray the constructs of organizational psychology in Employee of the Month at every step. Every
character’s personality was created in a way to display how the employee
responds to stressors and how each employee may be responsible for bullying,
counterproductive work behavior, or being motivated to accomplish certain
goals. The director does understand the subjective experience of work since the
four constructs used are so common in every day work place. The director did a
great job displaying, from different perspectives, the constructs of I/O
psychology in a comical way. The movie can be improved in a way by perhaps
going more into details of each character’s background, such as their
childhood. What motivates an individual has a lot to do with what they grew up
having or not having, such as money, friends, comfort, success, etc. The movie
did not go into details about childhoods of Amy, Vince, or any of Zach’s
friends. I would definitely recommend this movie to other people since it is
composed of educational material relating to not only I/O psychology, but also
your everyday common behavior that people from all cultures can relate to. It
is a great comedy film that can lead people to not just laugh it off, but also
think about the underlying concepts of complications in a simple work place.
References
Landy, F.J., & Conte, J.M.
(2010). Work in the 21st century: An introduction to industrial
organizational
psychology (3rd ed.).
Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Cell Biology
Take Home Essay Questions - Set 1 Name:_Laayla
Muhammad
Download this MS-Word document. Fill in your name at the top and type your
answers below. Save the questions and
your answers as an MS Word document with the .doc file extension (not
.docx). This assignment is due in the
D2L Dropbox on Sunday, 02-28-10
at 11:59pm.
Consider the reaction 7 of glycolysis:
2. A
ribosomal cell fraction was centrifuged on a sucrose density gradient and the
gradient was then separated into test tube fractions. Graph below shows the distribution of
polysomes in fraction tubes.
5.0 Explain the graph.
The distribution of polysomes in
fraction tubes is represented by this graph. Polysomal content is measured in
absorbencies, which in this graph is the absorbance at 280nm. The graph shows
that the bottom of the tube, there is more content of the polysomes, therefore,
its absorbance at 280nm being higher. Therefore, on the top, after being
centrifuged, less content remains and therefore, the absorbency of the sucrose
density gradient has is lower than the bottom. In the middle though, as the
content is the highest, shows that during the centrifuge, the polysomes are
denser in the middle, meaning more concentrated and therefore, the absorbency
is the highest.
B. For 5 points, correctly answer only one of the questions below (use as much space as needed):
B. For 5 points, correctly answer only one of the questions below (use as much space as needed):
1. You are trying to
isolate a Golgi vesicle fraction from cultured pancreatic “Islet of Langerhans”
cells by differential centrifugation. As
you perform the steps of the fractionation, you monitor the cell fractions by
electron microscopy. A sample electron
micrograph is seen at the right. In
addition to this electron microscope image, what more would you do to prove
that this fraction contains pancreatic cell Golgi vesicles? Be brief but be precise and specific.
Something we can do to prove that this particular fraction contains
pancreatic cell Golgi vesicles is by first noticing that these vesicles look
intact like they should be. We should also realize that RERs exist in these
vesicles because the proteins synthesized and packaged in them usually travel
down to these vesicles for “further processing before reaching their final
destination” (VOP: Cell Tour Pt 1). In order to confirm that these are Golgi
vesicles, we can “destroy the membranes and then release these proteins” (VOP:
Cell Tour Pt 2). This disruption will show the packaged proteins such as
secretory or peroxisomal ones. We can also methods such as “cytochemistry
(staining parts with chemicals), immunocytochemistry (staining with “tagged”
antibodies), and autoradiology (radioactive detection)” (VOP Cell Tour Pt 2) which
will darken and reveal the packaged proteins just to confirm the earlier
statements about the existence of RERs packaged proteins in the Golgi vesicles
for processing.
Reactions Part II
Studying reactions to strange experiences such as suicide bombing and discovering that cultural assumptions (of the person reacting) are partially responsible for those reactions deserves the most attention. This reflection on our reactions to strangeness is critically important in the world we live in, where people fail to realize the roles their hollow judgments can take on. For example, after September 11 Muslims “found themselves associated, occasionally explicitly but more often implicitly, with terrorism” (Asad 2007). Without the right knowledge about a culture's values and its traditions, analyzing it by using your own cultural values becomes inevitable. People often judge specific cultural traditions as wrong discovering the reasons behind them, which is also wrong. Talal Asad comments on such contradictions by stating that “these contradictions remain a fragile part of our modern subjectivity” (Asad 2007).
Without learning about a country's political, religious and economical status, it becomes difficult to understand the concept of suicide terrorism. Important questions such as, "Is there a religiously motivated terrorism? If so, how does it differ from other cruelties?" become critical (Asad 2007). Instead of obtaining correct information through research, people make comparisons to differentiate themselves from others, such as suicide bombers in this case. Once a person sees another as different, then labeling the actions of other people as strange makes sense to them. Therefore, people think if what they do is familiar, then what others do is strange. For example, upon Napoleon Chagnon’s first encounter with the Yanamamö, he states “My first day in the field illustrated to me what my teachers meant when they spoke of culture shock” (Chagnon 1992). Chagnon‘s statement proves that depending on assumptions will only create more gaps between people, causing more panic and giving birth to more “strangeness." It is also important to realize that understanding the strange requires time. The strange isn't the only thing analyzed, but so are the reactions of people that are reacting to all that is strange.
Asad, Talal. On Suicide Bombing. 2007. New York: Columbia University Press.
Chagnon, Napoleon. Yanomamö. 1992. Edition 4. Harcourt Brace Jovanvich.:10-19.
Laayla Muhammad
Regret.
We do things that we want to, but shouldn't. But we always think, no worries. We have so much time to regret it later. So much time to make UP for it. That's the life we lead, where we spend time dwelling on the past, crying over our mistakes, regretting actions that we made. Ironically, the more we loved it at the moment, the more we hate it in the future. And that is how people waste their life away. No, not by doing stuff they'll regret later, but by doing the actual regretting. We waste time on the past, instead of the present. Spending every second of our life just rethinking the past and blaming ourselves, isn't the way to go. But that's how we go. That's how we are going. That's how we'll go. And one day, once we're gone, there will be nothing that reflects us except our guilty emotions and pathetic regrets.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Take a breather, will ya?
It's hard to find yourself sitting there in complete calmness. It's difficult because we don't work that way. We don't take a breather. Our mind is being ripped apart in a million different directions. We allow that to happen though. Don't you see? We find reasons to not lay still. We work our minds so much that we begin to think a moment of peace is well deserved, but not welcome. We don't welcome serenity, we just wish it. We love hoping for things, not appreciating them or even noting them when they do occur. We are so burdened by our burdens, we don't allow ourselves the chance to be free. We don't admit it though. We are ignorant of it. We rant and complain and whine and preach about how we don't get what we want, and how this world never works for us, and how we would do anything for a little peace and quiet time. Therefore, we've established the main ground for what our focus is, what we're striving for, what we hope for the results to be. We've asked the questions, so now what is the hypothesis? Oh that's right, IF I finish this this this this this this this and that that that that and this that and this that, then yes, I'll achieve it all with success. I'll finally be finished. I'll then take a breather. Now, we've stated the hypothesis. But what about the experimental design? How do we go about this? Let's do everything and anything in our to do list. That's right... the to do list. The infamous to do list that states how many to do lists we have to make. We write steps on how we can achieve these burdening tasks and how fast we can get them done. Then we see those lists and write down everything we can so we can cross everything we can, only to realize that there are only two routes that we can take. So let's gather the data and observe so we can conclude.
We can either finish not even half of the items off the list and become disappointed. We can start venting out and blame ourselves for the failure or the world for creating obstacles. We can cry out and put ourselves in a worsening stage of rejection, fear, failure, and loss of confidence. We can also fake ourselves into creating more lists and thinking "This time, I'll turn things around. I'll finish everything!" At the moment, it's game over for us. We have lost round X. We will have to get up, after we have completely let ourselves drown in misery, just so we can put ourselves in the same exact situation all over again. We can't be content right now. We can't rest. We can't sleep anymore. We need to move quicker, act faster, think sharper, and breathe later. Let's observe route #2 and say that we finished everything off the list. That's right. We have actually completed every ridiculous and random task that managed to find a home in our to do lists. We have won right? We have finished the game? We exhausted ourselves and beat time and made history and challenged ourselves and tricked our minds all for completing these tasks so we can starting enjoying the peace that comes after. So we can feel worthy of it and say that we earned it and actually be able to recognize it in every form it comes in. Right? WRONG. That's not what happens. We finish these tasks just to find ourselves looking for this peace that isn't anywhere to be found. We create another unofficial task, "find essence of serenity" only to realize that we can't seem to. What now? All hope is gone. It's not like route #1, where we have enough ignorance to just start all over. We have finished everything this time. There is no rematch. Nothing to restart. So what now? What.. what what... what nothing. There is nothing. We have won just to fail. What we have learned? Can't say. We're in too much shock right now. Fuck peace. We are enraged. We are angry. We can't just sit and complain now. We'll now FIGHT for freedom. We'll BATTLE whatever we can in order to be content. We'll never rest until justice is achieved! But I ask dear people, when will we just learn how to simply take a breather and realize there is no winning? No failing? We just have to breathe and let ourselves wind down until we can see that peace never left us.... we left it.
Thursday, September 06, 2012
Victim.
We all love to play victim. I was hurt. I was tortured. I was played with. I was used. I was beaten. I was, I was, I was. And then there goes those.. I am, I am, I am. Let's stop it for a second. A second but let this second run for minutes. Let it simmer down and allow yourself a moment to breathe a victimless breath. Can we all be victims? Really? Who's the culprit? Who is the criminal? The one who makes us shout I was? The one who makes us scream I am? It's not logical. Someone had to be the bad guy. With the amount of people in this world, it's not logical that you're not the bad guy. You are that someone who made someone cry. Made someone feel used, abused, confused. We're all criminals and we're all victims. We live through this vicious cycle. And don't dare justify your wrong-doings. You do wrong like everyone else does wrong. It's the right way to live in this victimized world that we live in. So at the end of the day, if you want to cry, go ahead. Cry. Please do cry. You deserve it. You caused someone else to tear, it's now your turn to fear. Be the criminal, live your life, be the victim, live in strife.
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