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1930- 1945: significant emphasis is placed on training and acquiring in-depth knowledge of each
employee's specific role to enhance their performance effectively. The idea of improving employees’
job satisfaction and productivity is strongly linked (Chukwunonso, 2013)..
1945- 1965: union membership grows around the world, starting in the United States. This opens a
new door to employees’ voices, to their interests, and job expectations. “Compensation and benefits
administration also increase in importance as unions negotiate paid vacations, paid holidays, and
insurance coverage” (Chukwunonso, 2013, p. 5).
1965- 1985: it is directly assigned to human resources the responsibility of assuring equal rights over
the right of getting a job without mattering race, religion, or ideologies (Chukwunonso, 2013).
1985- Present: human resources management not only serves the company's concerns and the
employees’ interests but also the interests and realities of the world (Chukwunonso, 2013). Some
examples of it are the implementation of green human resources management (Ahmad, 2015; Renwick,
Redman, and Maguire, 2013; Opatha, 2013), the digital era in human resources management like the e-
human resources management (Girisha, & Nagendrababu, 2019; Popescu, & Popescu, 2016), the
gamification in human resources management and e-learning (Murawski, 2021; Vardalier, 2021;
Simpson, & Jenkins, 2015) to train and capacity building on employees.
Human resources management is in charge of many areas that keep an organization alive. It is in charge
of training, recruitment, cultural diversity, compensations (Ranjan, 2023), relations, personnel and
family wellness. Human resources management reminds everyone that organizations are done by
humans, beyond industrially desired outcomes.
Delving into Educational Organization Understanding
For the purpose of defining what an educational organization is, it is necessary to specify what is an
organization. Bennett, Crawford, Glatter, Hagon, Harris, Preedy, and Riches (1996), from The
University of Reading, state that when determining what an organization is, it is necessary to do it by
identifying its main characteristic: An organization has members.
Membership may be voluntary, as in a social club, or compulsory, as in a professional body,
which can revoke a member's license to practice. In between is membership as a paid
employee. Members accept certain obligations in the shape of rules and regulations to follow,