Thursday, September 11, 2008

cheaper by the dozen?...

that was my buka puasa at bukit kiara equestrian club yesterday while waiting for my other exco members at our monthly executive committee meeting hull university alumni association in malaysia...the president must set a good example and must always be the first to arrive...


Fasting month, I always look forward to this holy month and try to derive the most of it (in malay we say (mendapat menafaat sepenuhnya). I may have my other naughty human frailty obsessions or innocent vices but when it comes to fasting, the training, regimentation by my late father was something that became second nature, to me. Its a given and you observe the fasting with full surrenderance to Him Allah Almighty swt. By the age of 7, no excuses but we were all made to fast. Try it for half a day, was how it all began and soon practice makes it well not perfect but yes to become not something dreadful but a pleasurable duty as a good muslim should. Don't worry folks, I am not about to go into deeper discussions as to the scientific benefits of fasting.


I was reading stuff to prepare for this interview session tomorrow between 1130am to 1 pm at kulliyah ekonomi & pengurusan international islamic university, Gombak campus, where 4 undergrads will grill me on issues in compensation and benefits management, TV style, watched by 45 other undergraduates, when i stumbled upon this article below on management Gurus which brought back nostalgia of my early years of basic management theory. Frank and Lillian Gilbreth was one of those management gurus in the league, the likes of Frederick Taylor, Elton Mayo and many others in those days...enjoy the article below from the Economist:



Gurus
Frank and Lillian Gilbreth
Sep 5th 2008 From Economist.com


Frank (1868-1924) and Lillian Gilbreth (1878-1972) brought together two of the main streams of management thinking over the past 100 years. On the one hand, they followed the pioneering work in time and motion studies begun by Frederick Winslow Taylor, and on the other they developed the study of workplace psychology. Frank, who began his working life as a bricklayer, closely observed the ways in which different men performed the task and came to conclusions about the most efficient way. In one case he increased the rate of laying bricks from 1,000 a day to 2,700 a day. Lillian wrote a thesis on the psychology of management and her first notable publication, “Psychology in the Workplace”, was serialised in a journal of the Society of Industrial Engineers. The two subdivided workers’ hand movements into 17 different units, which they called “therbligs” (Gilbreth backwards, except for the t and the h). Doctors to this day owe a debt to them, since it was Frank who first came up with the idea that surgeons should use a nurse as “a caddy” to hand them their instruments as and when they were needed. Previously surgeons had searched for and fetched their own instruments while operating. The Gilbreths are generally considered as one unit. But Frank married Lillian when he was 36, after he had done much of his time-and-motion work and years after he had set up his own engineering consulting business. He died only 20 years later, after the couple had produced 12 children, who limited the amount of time they had to work together.

Lillian lived on for another 48 years after Frank’s death, continuing to work and give seminars for much of that time. Famously, she travelled to Europe a few days after her husband’s death in 1924 to fulfil a speaking engagement in Prague that he had undertaken. She was a redoubtable woman, forging a career in a discipline—management in the engineering industry—where women were not at the time taken seriously. Often called “the first lady of management”, she was also the first female member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. In recent years the Gilbreths’ work has largely disappeared from the management canon, with time-and-motion studies mostly associated with Taylor.

The couple are best remembered for a book written by two of their 12 children (Ernestine and Frank junior). Called “Cheaper by the Dozen” (first published in 1946), it has been turned into films and TV series that have little to do with the real lives of the Gilbreths, apart from the fact that they had twelve children. And even that was not quite the truth, since one of their children (the second) died of diphtheria when she was only six years old. They never actually had twelve offspring alive at the same time. The title of the book was taken from the answer Frank is alleged to have given when people asked him how he came to have so many children: “Because they come cheaper by the dozen.”

Lillian Gilbreth was included in the US National Women’s Hall of Fame in 1995.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

the bon apetite picture grabbed more attention then the article. just my blunt opinion.

Khaeruddin Sudharmin said...

hahaha..yeker? ok tenkiuk. just my sharp reaction..heehee

Anonymous said...

The first para is amazing. reallllly?

Khaeruddin Sudharmin said...

y was it amazing? cos u thot i am secular? with my blacktie n all? faith is in yr heart, not in the clothes u wear. have experience how the chinese muslims live in zinjiang autonomous region northwest china? and u thnk u're more muslim than other muslims, elsewhere in the world? thnk again ole chum...hehe

Anonymous said...

How I wish I could hold hands with you now ole chum!

Khaeruddin Sudharmin said...

hehehe...not bad eh o;e chappie? well, not that i am telling you a lie, only just being economical with the truth! hahahaha

SAMANTHA MASTURA said...

What a suprisedddd !!!! very talent and more intelegent la bro..k from Samantha...

Khaeruddin Sudharmin said...

huh? talent? intelligent? what's that? hohoho