The Principles of Scientific Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1919
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 144
UDK: 658.01 Tay
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120 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
years, have been made, similar in a general way to
the experiments upon various other elements which
have been referred to in this paper.
Perhaps the most important law belonging to
this class, in its relation to scientific man a,gem en f,;
is the effect which the task idea has upon the
efficiency of the workman. This, in fact, has
become such an important element of the mechanism
of scientific management, that by a great number of
people scientific management has come to be known
as “task management.”
There is absolutely nothing new in the task idea.
Each one of us will remember that in his own case
this idea was applied with good results in his school-
boy days. No efficient teacher would think of giving
a class of students an indefinite lesson to learn. Each
day a definite, clear-cut task is set by the teacher
before each scholar, stating that he must learn just
so much of the subject; and it is only by this means
that proper, systematic progress can be made by
the students. The average boy would go very
slowly if, instead of being given a task, he were told
to do as much as he could. All of us are grown-up
children, and it is equally true that the average
workman will work with the greatest satisfaction,
both to himself and to his employer, when he is
given each day a definite task which he is to perform
in a given time, and which constitutes a proper
day’s work for a good workman. This furnishes
the workman with a clear-cut standard, by which he
can throughout the day measure his own progress,