问题 问答题 案例分析题

张A是某重点大学的博士研究生,怀有远大的政治抱负。毕业前夕他参加了省里的选调生考试,在层层选拔中脱颖而出,被任命为某县副县长,分管文教卫生工作。张A在领导班子中年龄最小、学历最高,是众人眼中冉冉升起的“政治明星”,组织上也对他寄予厚望。县委书记王B是下派干部,年富力强,果断而不失严谨,是出了名的“行动派”。县长李C是从本地基层成长起来的干部,在地方上有自己的“小圈子”,上上下下关系都处理得很好。为创建和谐城市、丰富百姓的精神文化生活,县里决定兴建一个文化活动中心,群众对此也十分支持。张A作为分管副县长具体负责此事,他对上任以来的第一个重要任务铆足了劲儿,认为以自己的能力肯定能够圆满地完成文化活动中心的建设任务。然而在具体工作中,张A渐渐发现,凡是和文化活动中心建设有关的事项,包括选址、设计方案、招标过程等,王B书记事无巨细,样样关心,甚至连室外绿化选择什么树种也要亲自过问,自己上报的方案屡次被否定。张A感到自己事事做不了主,处处有约束,表面上是主管领导,实际只是个跑腿汇报的,工作积极性受到影响,在一些场合抱怨自己工作放不开手脚。县长李C因与县委书记王B在人事安排上出现过摩擦,而对书记有了成见。在一次到省里开会的间隙,李C县长意味深长地对张A说:“你学历高又年轻,组织上重视你,但也可能因此成为一些人的眼中钉,年轻人啊,在仕途上追求进步首先不能站错队。”张A明白李县长是想借此拉拢自己,但他认为凡事应该坚持党性原则,不愿搞小团体那一套,断然拒绝了李县长伸出的“橄榄枝”。李县长因此对他产生了看法,逐渐疏远了他。由于张A的工作得不到支持,文化活动中心建设中途搁置,群众意见很大。年终上级组织部门来考核班子,王书记说张A眼高手低,遇到挫折便打退堂鼓;李县长反映张A清高自傲,不考虑班子团结;部分干部群众由于文化活动中心的事情对张A也有了负面看法。由此组织上对于他的工作表现不是很满意。与此同时,张A又向组织反映当地人际关系太复杂,阻碍了自己施展才干,请求调离。

张A陷入尴尬境地的原因何在?

答案

参考答案:

1.没有摆正心态,找准定位。作为一名刚踏入社会的高学历人才,张A虽然担任了地方要职,但本质上还是职场新人,应该明白自己在班子中的定位是“助手”,应以尊重和服从的心态面对上级领导。张A在工作中盲目自信,没有沉下心来了解基层具体情况,忽视了向比自己经验丰富的领导学习和请教。

2.遇难而退,缺乏沟通能力和勇于进取的精神。工作上出现问题是正常的,文化中心建设项目进展不顺利,张A不是从自己身上查找原因,勇于承担责任,找机会和领导进行沟通交流,积极协调解决问题,找到最佳的建设方案,而是消极地抱怨领导对自己束缚太多,这反映出他的轻率和不成熟。

3.缺乏领导艺术和处理各方面关系的技巧,使自己陷入孤立。面对领导班子中客观存在的“小圈子”情况,张A坚持党性原则很对,但没有注意方法策略,非常生硬地拒绝李县长的“美意”,不能最大限度地搞好团结,为开展工作创造条件;项目暂时搁置后,面对群众的质疑和不满,他没有及时、耐心地做好说服解释工作,而是任其发展,使误解加深。

单项选择题

It was two years ago today that the hunting ban came into force, supposedly ending centuries of tradition. However, the law has been an unmitigated failure—not that either side is shouting about it.
It was a nightmare vision that struck fear and loathing into the hearts of millions. When the hunting ban became law, it was said, 16,000 people would lose their jobs, thousands of hounds would be put down, rotting carcasses would litter the countryside, hedgerows would disappear, riders would face on-the-spot fines, law-abiding people from doctors to barristers would be dragged from their horses and carted off to prison, while dog owners would be prosecuted if their mutt caught a rabbit.
These were just some of the claims as desperate countryside campaigners battled to save their sport in the lead—up to the hunting ban, which Labour rammed into law using the Parliament Act on November 18, 2004.
For many, the fears were real. Others exaggerated as they fought an increasingly aggressive anti-hunting lobby which had rejected acres of independent evidence affirming that hunting is the most humane way of killing foxes. In the battle to "fight prejudice, fight the ban", every emotive argument was deployed.
For its part, the anti-hunting brigade extravagantly claimed that the ban would put an end to the rich parading in red jackets. A senior Labour MP, Peter Bradley, admitted in this newspaper that it was, as many suspected, about "class war". He lost his seat shortly afterwards. But people in red coats did not disappear.
In fact, none of the forecasts came true. What did happen was something nobody had predicted: the spectacular revival and growth of hunting with hounds. In short, the hunting ban has been a failure.
Today, on the second anniversary of the ban’s coming into force on February 18, 2005, new figures show that participation in the sport has never been higher. It is so cheerful that two new packs have been formed, something that has not happened for centuries.
They include the seductively named Private Pack, set up by the financier Roddy Fleming in Gloucestershire. It operates on an invitation—only basis, a sort of hunting private members’ club. This can only mean one thing: like it or not, hunting is cool. Young people are taking it up, enticed by the element of rebellion and the mystique of what actually happens as hunts attempt to keep within the law.

By saying "people in red coats did not disappear", the author implied that ______.

A.the upper class won the "war"

B.Bradley deserved his fate

C.the hunting ban did not work

D.the hunting ban was untimely

单项选择题