HSA 530 QUIZ 1 (TWO VERSIONS POSTED 40 QUESTIONS)
VERSION 1
Statutory benefits are:
[removed] | Optional benefits available to employees. | |
[removed] | The organization’s basic benefits package. | |
[removed] | Benefits provided under contract by external suppliers. | |
[removed] | Benefits required by state and federal law. |
Many the personnel departments’ image problems were owing to the performance and behavior of personnel practitioners who were not fully prepared for the times.
[removed] | True | |
[removed] | False |
The human resources specialty of labor relations was established for the purpose of dealing with labor unions.
[removed]True
[removed]False
Federal and state wage-and-hour laws had little effect on the activities of the personnel department.
[removed]True
[removed]False
A professional employer organization (PEO) provides the means for some smaller organizations to obtain most of their human resource services externally.
[removed]True
[removed]False
The principal role of human resources may best be described as:
[removed] | Exerting control and direction over other organizational elements. | |
[removed] | Serving as the organization’s primary resource on employment-related legal issues. | |
[removed] | Providing service and advice to other organizational elements. | |
[removed] | Keeping all employees in line with policies and work rules. |
The majority of chief executive officers (CEOs) ordinarily expect their human resource departments to:
[removed] | Supervise recruitment, administer compensation and benefits, and maintain personnel records. | ||
[removed] | Provide advice and counsel on employee matters. | ||
[removed] | Keep the organization out of employment-related legal trouble. | ||
[removed] | All of the above. |
The most effective reporting relationship for the human resources director is:
[removed] | Reporting to the chief operating officer (COO). | |
[removed] | Reporting to the organization’s financial executive. | |
[removed] | Reporting to the chief executive officer (CEO). | |
[removed] | Any of the above. |
It is essential that every department manager be intimately familiar with all provisions of the organization’s benefits plans.
[removed]True
[removed]False
All of a health care organization’s training and development activities are usually centralized in human resources.
[removed]True
[removed]False
A health care organization’s employee pension fund is ordinarily managed by an outside specialist rather than by the organization’s HR department.
[removed]True
[removed]False
The payroll office, once a constant feature of HR departments, was removed from HR primarily because:
[removed] | Payroll became too much work for the human resource staff. | |
[removed] | Human resources lost a political struggle with the finance department for the control of the payroll activity. | |
[removed] | It was seen as more efficient to have payroll done by an outside service. | |
[removed] | The most applicable knowledge and expertise became centered in activities having to do with accounting and finance. |
The National Labor Relations Act (1935) established a number of rules for the conduct of both unions and employers in labor organizing and situations.
[removed]True
[removed]False
Under the provisions of the Employee Polygraph Protection Act (EPPA):
[removed] | At the option of an employer, all job applicants may be required to take polygraph tests. | |
[removed] | Routine use of polygraph tests is permitted in organizations that are concerned with nuclear power. | |
[removed] | An employee’s failure of a polygraph test must result in the employee’s discharge. | |
[removed] | Any employer is permitted utilize polygraph testing as long as the employees to be tested are selected at random. |
If the same subject is covered by federal legislation as well as by state laws, the federal law always takes precedence over the state law.
[removed]True
[removed]False
Of legislation in place prior to 1964, the regulations primarily affecting managers:
[removed] | Were non-existent. | |
[removed] | Affected only those managers working in financial capacities. | |
[removed] | Concerned only human resource managers. | |
[removed] | Were essentially limited to the Fair Labor Standards Act and the National Labor Relations Act. |
It is strongly recommended that all managers describe their management styles in detail to their employees so the employees will know what to expect.
[removed]True
[removed]False
The people-centered manager is must primarily focus on in getting the necessary work done through the efforts of people.
[removed]True
[removed]False
People-centered management is appropriate, and in fact essential for efficient operation, when:
[removed] | Most jobs are repetitive and routine, requiring the workers to follow the same few specific steps. | |
[removed] | The primary concern of the manager is to turn out a predetermined number of product units each day. | |
[removed] | When all of the group’s workers are assigned to specific fixed work stations. | |
[removed] | Tasks are irregular and varied and output scheduling is difficult. |
The most effective managers invest considerable effort in developing a one-top-one relationship with each employee.
[removed]True
[removed]False
VERSION 2
- It has been repeatedly proven that most health care workers are primarily motivated by the promise of material rewards.
- It is unnecessary for department managers to be knowledgeable of compensation practices as long as there is a capable HR department in the organization.
- It is essential that every department manager be intimately familiar with all provisions of the organization’s benefits plans.
- The payroll office, once a constant feature of HR departments, was removed from HR primarily because:
- The Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) Act (1973) took precedence over all state regulations that presented any barriers to the formation of health maintenance organizations.
- If the same subject is covered by federal legislation as well as by state laws, the federal law always takes precedence over the state law.
- The National Labor Relations Act had the principal effect of:
- Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, commonly referred to as the Taft-Hartley Act, amended the National Labor Relations Act and:
- Technological changes are always good for the organization because they almost always lead to reductions in the cost of delivering health care.)
- A professional employer organization (PEO) provides the means for some smaller organizations to obtain most of their human resource services externally.
- The most effective reporting relationship for the human resources director is:
- Competition is increasing in health care in part because elements of a shrinking hospital system are struggling to acquire or retain a specific market share.
- The “employment office” gradually evolved into “human resources” because:
- Statutory benefits are:
- The National Labor Relations Act (the Wagner Act):
- Federal and state wage-and-hour laws had little effect on the activities of the personnel department.
- Managers in some health care departments must necessarily address the needs of employees of greatly varying education and capabilities.
- The most effective managers invest considerable effort in developing a one-top-one relationship with each employee.
- The people-centered manager is must primarily focus on in getting the necessary work done through the efforts of people.
- Maintaining a genuine open-door policy is easier for a first-line manager than for a higher-level manager because:
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