Managing Human Resources
True / False Questions
1. Managers and economists traditionally have seen human resource management as a
source of value to their organizations.
True False
2. The concept of "human resource management" implies that employees are
interchangeable, easily replaced assets that must be managed like any other physical asset.
True False
3. Human resources cannot be imitated.
True False
4. No two human resource departments will have precisely the same roles and
responsibilities.
True False
5. Today, greater concern for innovation and quality has shifted the trend in job design to an
increased use of narrowly defined jobs.
True False
6. An organization makes selection decisions in order to add employees to its workforce, as
well as to transfer existing employees to new positions.
True False
,7. In the context of performance management, when the person evaluating performance is
not familiar with the details of the job, outcomes tend to be easier to evaluate than specific
behaviors.
True False
8. The pay and benefits that employees earn play an important role in motivating them,
except when rewards such as bonuses are linked to the individual's or group's
achievements.
True False
9. Maintaining positive employee relations includes preparing and distributing employee
handbooks that detail company policies and, in large organizations, company publications
such as a monthly newsletter or a Web site on the organization's intranet.
True False
10. Establishing and administering personnel policies allows the company to handle
problematic situations more fairly and objectively than if it addressed such incidents on a
case-by-case basis.
True False
11. Currently, no federal laws outline how to use employee databases in order to protect
employees' privacy while also meeting employers' and society's concerns for security.
True False
12. Human resource management is increasingly becoming a purely administrative
function.
True False
,13. Evidence-based HR refers to the practice of initiating disciplinary action against
employees only in the presence of clear and demonstrable proof of undesirable behavior.
True False
, 14. Corporate social responsibility describes a company's commitment to meeting the needs
of its stakeholders.
True False
15. To carry out the functions of talent manager/organizational designer effectively, an HR
manager must possess knowledge of how the organization is structured and how that
structure might be adjusted to help it meet its goals for developing and using employees'
talents.
True False
16. All HR skills require some ability as operational executor.
True False
17. In contrast to those in smaller organizations, supervisors in larger firms need not be
familiar with the basics of HRM.
True False
18. Recent surveys indicate that managers have largely positive perceptions of the ethical
conduct of U.S. businesses.
True False
19. According to the right of privacy, employers can conceal the nature of the job before
hiring an employee.
True False
20. Mimi feels that her being denied promotion has more to do with her being a woman
than with her performance. However, her supervisors and the HR department are refusing
to hear her case. This indicates that Mimi has been denied her right to due process.
True False