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Syllabus
Negotiations and
Administration (HRM 340)
* This is the Fall 2007 syllabus. See the appropriate syllabus for the semester you are interested in.
This is a three-credit graduate level course and is one
in a series of elective courses in the Human Resource Management program.
The Human Resource Management program is part of the online Master of Professional
Studies degree offered through the University of Connecticut's Center for Continuing Studies.
The developer of this course was Dr. Mark E. Sullivan.
Course Title:
Contract Negotiation and Administration (HRM 340)
Credits: 3
Instructor: Mark E. Sullivan,
Ph.D. Associate Extension Professor
Email: Mark.Sullivan@Uconn.edu
Tel: (860) 486-3419
This course provides the student with the fundamental
skills needed to participate fully in any situation requiring bargaining
skills.
By the end of the
course, the student will be able to:
- Identify different styles of bargaining.
- Create an abstract of articles on the two major types
of collective bargaining outlined in class.
- Identify specific strategies that could offer collective
bargaining success.
- Demonstrate research skills necessary to prepare for
bargaining.
- Conduct bargaining sessions using strategies he/she
has developed.
- Identify and demonstrate skills used at the bargaining
table, including costing and selecting appropriate language.
- Critique bargaining sessions.
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Course
Requirements and Grading
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Grades will be determined by your performance in the course as evidenced by what you offer in the discussions (25%), the term paper proposal (25%), and the term paper (50%). I fully expect that you will be submitting original material and commenting on your fellow classmates' ideas each week. Simply agreeing with what has been submitted is not enough; you MUST contribute to the discussion and at a level commensurate with your graduate student status.
| Grading Categories |
Percentage of Final Grade |
| Discussions/Assignments |
25 % |
| Term Paper Proposal |
25 % |
| Term Paper |
50 % |
By module 3 (week 6), you will need to share with me a succinctly written proposal (no more than 3 paragraphs, preferably shorter..this will be a challenging as it requires you to be very specific in what you will be researching), including a detailed list of resources you will be employing in composing your term paper. Your proposal must include the topic you wish to write about, a short description of why this is important to collective bargaining, your initial thoughts on a research strategy and a detailed list of resources you will be employing (please share an annotation on each resource that reveals why these are the best available). I encourage you to choose a topic that both interests you and can be utilized in the "real world."
The completed term paper is due no later than the next to last module.
Please stay up with the course readings, discussions, and
assignments. If you fall behind and make comments late, it will not help
your grade.
If you come into the course and then vanish only to reappear
at a later date, please do not ask for an incomplete. The University is quite
clear; for an incomplete to be given, a student must be participating regularly
and passing the course at that juncture. For an incomplete to be considered,
you must have an excellent weekly participation record, make contributions
that have raised the level of course discussion, and have an excellent reason
for requesting an "I."
You are responsible for acting in accordance with the Student
Code, available at http://www.dosa.uconn.edu/student_code.cfm.
These course texts
may be purchased locally or through an online bookstore.
Required Texts:
Herman, E. E. (1997). Collective bargaining and labor relations.
(4th ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN: 0132969637.
Loughran, C. S. (2003). Negotiating a labor contract:
a management handbook. (3rd ed.). BNA Books. ISBN:
1570183724.
Ehrenreich, B. (2002). Nickel and dimed: On (not) getting by in America. Owl Books. ISBN:
0805063897.
Other
Required Materials:
You can rent or purchase this movie.
Lumet, S. (Director). (1957). 12 Angry Men. [Motion
picture]. United States
*You MUST obtain the 1957 version.
Other
Source Materials:
These materials
are available within the course through the Electronic
Course Reserve (ECR).
Barkat, J. S. (2002). “Building on the Strengths of Different
Approaches.” In Negotiation Journal, 18(4): 359-362.
Paquet, R. (2000). “Does Interest-Based Bargaining (IBB)
Really Make a Difference in Collective Bargaining Outcomes?” In Negotiation
Journal, 16(3): 281-296.
Web sites will be listed
in this course.
Module
0: Course Overview
Module 1: The Evolution of the Bargaining
Relationship
Module 2: Legal Structure
of Collective Bargaining
Module 3: The Employee's Right to Organize
Module 4: Modern Era Labor and Management
Relations
Module 5: Main Goals of Labor and Management
Module 6: Unit Determination
Module 7: Collective Bargaining
Module 8: Collective Bargaining Procedure
Module 9: 12 Angry
Men
Module 10: Costing
Challenges
Module 11: Ethics
Module 12: Contract Administration
Students
will be provided an opportunity to evaluate instruction in this
course using the University's standard procedures, which are administered
by the Office of Institutional Research.
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