Personality/Leadership Linkage
There is a link between an individual’s personality and the leadership style with which individuals are most comfortable and therefore more likely to use. The connection between personality and leadership style has been well noted by several researchers and leadership specialists (Bass, 2000, 2008; Pillai, Schriesheim, & Williams, 1999; de Charon, 2003).
It is important to understand your natural leadership style…so you can capitalize on your natural leadership strengths (or be aware of and address your natural weaknesses) for your career development, self-fulfillment and success at the workplace.
Journal of Leadership Education Volume 8, Issue 2 – Fall 2009 114
The 16 personality types created by Myers and Briggs (Myers & McCaulley, 1985) and adapted by Keirsey and Bates (1984) are a combination of:
EI (extroversion or introversion)
EI are ways in which people gather energy. E types are people who recharge when they are around people. I types are those who need solitude to re-energize.
SN (sensing or intuition)
S types are those who thrive on facts and Ns are those who tend to make decisions based on hunches.
TF (thinking or feeling)
T types are logical and objective in the decisions they make and Fs are more subjective and take things personally.
PJ (perceiving or judging).
Ps like to keep their options open and Js prefer deadlines.
No type is better than the other. They are all just ways in which we interact with the world and make decisions. Understanding these differences can, however, provide insights.
Being a Leader
Everyone, at some time in life, is asked to be a leader, whether to lead a classroom discussion, coach a children’s soccer team, or direct a fund-raising campaign. Many situations require leadership. A leader may have a high profile (e.g., an elected public official) or a low profile (e.g., a volunteer leader in Big Brothers Big Sisters), but in every situation there are leadership demands placed on the individual who is the leader.
Being a leader is challenging, exciting, and rewarding, and carries with it many responsibilities. This chapter discusses different ways of looking at leadership and their impacts on what it means to be a leader.
DEFINING LEADERSHIP
At the outset, it is important to address a basic question: What is leadership? Scholars who study leadership have struggled with this question for many decades and have written a great deal about the nature of leadership (Antonakis, Cianciolo, & Sternberg, 2004; Bass, 1990; Conger & Riggio, 2007). In leadership literature, more than 100 different definitions of leadership have been identified (Rost, 1991). Despite these many definitions, a number of concepts are recognized by most people as accurately reflecting what it is to be a leader.
INTRODUCTION TO LEADERSHIP
Leadership has long intrigued humankind and has been the topic of extensive literature for centuries. The earliest writings include philosophies of leade.
Running Head LEADERSHIP1LEADERSHIP 3Lea.docxjeanettehully
Running Head: LEADERSHIP 1
LEADERSHIP 3
Leadership
Student’s Name
Institution Affiliation
Leadership
Narcissistic leaders are individuals who are only concerned with their social standing, self-actualization, and position within the world. Moreover, narcissistic leaders are self-absorbed and implement actions to improve these aspects, even when it is at the expense of other individuals (Northouse, 2018). Narcissistic leadership may be toxic to the success of an organization since a leader makes decisions centered on their personal needs as opposed to the needs of a company. This destructing effect is more severe if a leader holds a senior position as the forms of the decision they make encompass an increased potential to damage the organization. Machiavellian is a phrase that is associated with a leader who is perceived to be dangerous. Bill Gates exhibited transformational leadership as he was passionate about his work and adhered to a strong vision which assisted in energizing the individuals he worked with at all levels (Meyer & Meijers, 2018). Steve Jobs portrayed an autocratic style of leadership as he had a thorough eye for detail and encircled himself with like-minded individuals to follow his lead. Paul Allen was a positive energizer; as such, he created liveliness and vitality as well as strengthened other individuals around him. The traits in these leaders are positive because they were all geared towards achieving success within their respective organizations. Apple and Microsoft are both successful and renowned organizations across the globe.
References
Meyer, R., & Meijers, R. (2018). Leadership agility : developing yourrepertoire of leadership styles. London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
Northouse, P. G. (2018). Introduction to leadership : concepts and practice. Los Angeles: SAGE.
When should a leader be directive or empowering?
How to develop your own situational theory of
leadership
Henry P. Sims Jr.a,*, Samer Faraj b, Seokhwa Yun c
a Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, U.S.A.
b Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1G5, Canada
c College of Business Administration, Seoul National University, Shinlim Dong, Kwanak Ku, Seoul 151-916,
Republic of Korea
Business Horizons (2009) 52, 149—158
www.elsevier.com/locate/bushor
KEYWORDS
Leadership;
Situational;
Situational leadership;
Contingency theory;
Empowering
Abstract A situational theory of leadership attempts to match a particular leader-
ship style or type to specific external circumstances. The general idea is that one type
of leadership will be effective in one situation, but a different type of leadership will
be effective in another situation. Historically, situational theories of leadership have
been too abstract to apply to specific situations. Nevertheless, the concept of
situational leadership retains considerable intuitive appeal. ...
Running Head LEADERSHIP1LEADERSHIP 3Lea.docxwlynn1
Running Head: LEADERSHIP 1
LEADERSHIP 3
Leadership
Student’s Name
Institution Affiliation
Leadership
Narcissistic leaders are individuals who are only concerned with their social standing, self-actualization, and position within the world. Moreover, narcissistic leaders are self-absorbed and implement actions to improve these aspects, even when it is at the expense of other individuals (Northouse, 2018). Narcissistic leadership may be toxic to the success of an organization since a leader makes decisions centered on their personal needs as opposed to the needs of a company. This destructing effect is more severe if a leader holds a senior position as the forms of the decision they make encompass an increased potential to damage the organization. Machiavellian is a phrase that is associated with a leader who is perceived to be dangerous. Bill Gates exhibited transformational leadership as he was passionate about his work and adhered to a strong vision which assisted in energizing the individuals he worked with at all levels (Meyer & Meijers, 2018). Steve Jobs portrayed an autocratic style of leadership as he had a thorough eye for detail and encircled himself with like-minded individuals to follow his lead. Paul Allen was a positive energizer; as such, he created liveliness and vitality as well as strengthened other individuals around him. The traits in these leaders are positive because they were all geared towards achieving success within their respective organizations. Apple and Microsoft are both successful and renowned organizations across the globe.
References
Meyer, R., & Meijers, R. (2018). Leadership agility : developing yourrepertoire of leadership styles. London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
Northouse, P. G. (2018). Introduction to leadership : concepts and practice. Los Angeles: SAGE.
When should a leader be directive or empowering?
How to develop your own situational theory of
leadership
Henry P. Sims Jr.a,*, Samer Faraj b, Seokhwa Yun c
a Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, U.S.A.
b Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1G5, Canada
c College of Business Administration, Seoul National University, Shinlim Dong, Kwanak Ku, Seoul 151-916,
Republic of Korea
Business Horizons (2009) 52, 149—158
www.elsevier.com/locate/bushor
KEYWORDS
Leadership;
Situational;
Situational leadership;
Contingency theory;
Empowering
Abstract A situational theory of leadership attempts to match a particular leader-
ship style or type to specific external circumstances. The general idea is that one type
of leadership will be effective in one situation, but a different type of leadership will
be effective in another situation. Historically, situational theories of leadership have
been too abstract to apply to specific situations. Nevertheless, the concept of
situational leadership retains considerable intuitive appeal. .
Article Reflection- Read- The third new way- A new source of leadershi.pdfaakarshanelectronic
Article Reflection: Read: The third new way: A new source of leadership by Drath. How does
this compare to the readings from the text. This book is about what it takes to lead. Everyone, at
some time in life, is asked to be a leader, whether to lead a classroom discussion, coach a
children's soccer team, or direct a fund-raising campaign. Many situations require leadership.
Leadership, according to Rost ( 1991 ), is a mutual influence process, involving both leaders and
followers. But, in every leadership situation, expectations and demands are placed upon one or
more individuals to initiate and take responsibility for a decision, an event, or another need. A
leader may have a high profile (e.g., an elected public official) or a low profile (e.g., a volunteer
leader in Big. Brothers Big Sisters), but in every situation, leadership demands are placed on the
individual who is the leader. Being a leader is challenging, exciting, and rewarding, and carries
with it many responsibilities. This chapter discusses different ways of looking at leadership and
their impacts on what it means to be a leader. LEADERSHIP EXPLAINED At the outset, it is
important to address a basic question: What is leadenbip? Scholars who study leadership have
struggled with this question for many decades and have written a great deal about the nature of
leadership (Antonakis, Cianciolo, \& Sternberg, 2004; Bass, 1990; Conger \& Riggio, 2007).
(See Box 1.1.) In leadership litenture, more than 100 different definitions of leadership have
been identified (Rost, 1991). Despite these many definitions, a number of concepts are
recognized by most people as accurately reflecting what it is to be a leader. "Leadership is a
Trait" First, leadership is thought of as a trait. A trait is a distinguishing quality of an individual,
and defining leadership as a trait means that each individual brings to the table certain qualities
that influence the way he or she leads. Some leaders are confident, some are decisive, and still
others are outgoing and sociable. Saying that leadership is a trait places a great deal of emphasis
on the leader and on the leader's special gifts. It follows the INTRODUCTION Why are some
people leaders while others are not? What makes people become leaders? Do leaders have
certain traits? These questions have been of interest for many years. It scems that all of us want
to know what characteristics account for effective leadership. This chapter will address the taits
that are important to leadership. Since the early 20 th century, hundreds of research studies have
been conducted on the traits of leaders. These studies have produced an extensive list of ideal
leadership traits (see Antonakis, Cianciolo, \& Sternberg. 2004; Bass, 1990). The list of
important leadership traits is long and includes such traits as diligence, trustworthiness,
dependability, articulateness, sociability, open-mindedness, intelligence, confidence, self-
assurance, and conscientiousness. Beca.
1
Introduction
Leadership is a highly sought-after and highly valued commodity. In the 1 5 years since the first edition of this book was published, the
public has become increasingly captivated by the idea of leadership.
People continue to ask themselves and others what makes good leaders. As
individuals, they seek more information on how to become effective
leaders. As a result, bookstore shelves are filled with popular books about
leaders and ad,·ice on how to be a leader. Many people belie,·e that
leadership is a way to improve their personal, social, and professional lives.
Corporations seek those with leadership ability because they believe they
bring special assets to their organizations and, ultimately, improve the
bottom line. Academic institutions throughout the country have responded
by providing programs in leadership studies.
In addition, leadership has gained the attention of researche rs worldwide.
A review ofthe scholarly studies on leadership shows that there is a wide variety
of different theoretical approaches to explain the complexities of the leader
ship process (e.g., Bass, 1990; Bryman, 1992; Bl)'Tllan, Collinson, Grint, Jack
son & Uhl-Bien, 201 I ; Day & Antonakis, 2012; Gardner, 1990; Hickman.
2009; Mumford, 2006; Rost, 1991 ). Some researchers conceptualize leader
ship as a trait or as a behavior, whereas others view leadership from an infor
mation-processing perspective or relational standpoinl Leadership has been
studied using both qualitative and quantitative methods in many contexts,
including small groups, therapeutic groups, and large organizations. Collec
ti,·ely, the research findings on leadership from all of these areas provide a
picture ofa process that is far more sophisticated and complex than the often
simplistic view presented in some of the popular books on leadership.
This book treats leadership as a complex process having multiple
dimensions. Based on the research literature, this text provides an in-depth
I Cl) 1.1 FmPrninn Pr;>rtirP< I 'GEt 1 ? I ,:~;art~r<hin in Nurdnn
2 LEADERSHIP I TH EO RY AND PRACTICE
description and application of many different approaches to leadership.
Our emphasis is on how theory can inform the practice of leadership. In
this book, we describe each theory and then explain how the theory can be
used in real situations.
LEADERSHIP DEFINED
There are many ways to finish the sentence, "Leadership is...." In fact, as
Stogdill ( 1974, p. 7) pointed o ut in a review of leadership research, there
are almost as many different definitions of leadership as there are people
who have tried to define it. It is much like the words democracy, love, and
peace. Although each of us intuitively knows what we mean by such words,
the words can have different meanings for different people. As Box 1.1
shows, scholars and practitioners have attempted to define leadership for
more than a century without universal consensus.
Box 1.1 The Evolut ...
1 Introduction Leadership is a highly sought-after aAbbyWhyte974
1
Introduction
Leadership is a highly sought-after and highly valued commodity. In the 1 5 years since the first edition of this book was published, the
public has become increasingly captivated by the idea of leadership.
People continue to ask themselves and others what makes good leaders. As
individuals, they seek more information on how to become effective
leaders. As a result, bookstore shelves are filled with popular books about
leaders and ad,·ice on how to be a leader. Many people belie,·e that
leadership is a way to improve their personal, social, and professional lives.
Corporations seek those with leadership ability because they believe they
bring special assets to their organizations and, ultimately, improve the
bottom line. Academic institutions throughout the country have responded
by providing programs in leadership studies.
In addition, leadership has gained the attention of researche rs worldwide.
A review ofthe scholarly studies on leadership shows that there is a wide variety
of different theoretical approaches to explain the complexities of the leader
ship process (e.g., Bass, 1990; Bryman, 1992; Bl)'Tllan, Collinson, Grint, Jack
son & Uhl-Bien, 201 I ; Day & Antonakis, 2012; Gardner, 1990; Hickman.
2009; Mumford, 2006; Rost, 1991 ). Some researchers conceptualize leader
ship as a trait or as a behavior, whereas others view leadership from an infor
mation-processing perspective or relational standpoinl Leadership has been
studied using both qualitative and quantitative methods in many contexts,
including small groups, therapeutic groups, and large organizations. Collec
ti,·ely, the research findings on leadership from all of these areas provide a
picture ofa process that is far more sophisticated and complex than the often
simplistic view presented in some of the popular books on leadership.
This book treats leadership as a complex process having multiple
dimensions. Based on the research literature, this text provides an in-depth
I Cl) 1.1 FmPrninn Pr;>rtirP< I 'GEt 1 ? I ,:~;art~r<hin in Nurdnn
2 LEADERSHIP I TH EO RY AND PRACTICE
description and application of many different approaches to leadership.
Our emphasis is on how theory can inform the practice of leadership. In
this book, we describe each theory and then explain how the theory can be
used in real situations.
LEADERSHIP DEFINED
There are many ways to finish the sentence, "Leadership is...." In fact, as
Stogdill ( 1974, p. 7) pointed o ut in a review of leadership research, there
are almost as many different definitions of leadership as there are people
who have tried to define it. It is much like the words democracy, love, and
peace. Although each of us intuitively knows what we mean by such words,
the words can have different meanings for different people. As Box 1.1
shows, scholars and practitioners have attempted to define leadership for
more than a century without universal consensus.
Box 1.1 The Evolut ...
Running Head LEADERSHIP1LEADERSHIP 3Lea.docxjeanettehully
Running Head: LEADERSHIP 1
LEADERSHIP 3
Leadership
Student’s Name
Institution Affiliation
Leadership
Narcissistic leaders are individuals who are only concerned with their social standing, self-actualization, and position within the world. Moreover, narcissistic leaders are self-absorbed and implement actions to improve these aspects, even when it is at the expense of other individuals (Northouse, 2018). Narcissistic leadership may be toxic to the success of an organization since a leader makes decisions centered on their personal needs as opposed to the needs of a company. This destructing effect is more severe if a leader holds a senior position as the forms of the decision they make encompass an increased potential to damage the organization. Machiavellian is a phrase that is associated with a leader who is perceived to be dangerous. Bill Gates exhibited transformational leadership as he was passionate about his work and adhered to a strong vision which assisted in energizing the individuals he worked with at all levels (Meyer & Meijers, 2018). Steve Jobs portrayed an autocratic style of leadership as he had a thorough eye for detail and encircled himself with like-minded individuals to follow his lead. Paul Allen was a positive energizer; as such, he created liveliness and vitality as well as strengthened other individuals around him. The traits in these leaders are positive because they were all geared towards achieving success within their respective organizations. Apple and Microsoft are both successful and renowned organizations across the globe.
References
Meyer, R., & Meijers, R. (2018). Leadership agility : developing yourrepertoire of leadership styles. London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
Northouse, P. G. (2018). Introduction to leadership : concepts and practice. Los Angeles: SAGE.
When should a leader be directive or empowering?
How to develop your own situational theory of
leadership
Henry P. Sims Jr.a,*, Samer Faraj b, Seokhwa Yun c
a Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, U.S.A.
b Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1G5, Canada
c College of Business Administration, Seoul National University, Shinlim Dong, Kwanak Ku, Seoul 151-916,
Republic of Korea
Business Horizons (2009) 52, 149—158
www.elsevier.com/locate/bushor
KEYWORDS
Leadership;
Situational;
Situational leadership;
Contingency theory;
Empowering
Abstract A situational theory of leadership attempts to match a particular leader-
ship style or type to specific external circumstances. The general idea is that one type
of leadership will be effective in one situation, but a different type of leadership will
be effective in another situation. Historically, situational theories of leadership have
been too abstract to apply to specific situations. Nevertheless, the concept of
situational leadership retains considerable intuitive appeal. ...
Running Head LEADERSHIP1LEADERSHIP 3Lea.docxwlynn1
Running Head: LEADERSHIP 1
LEADERSHIP 3
Leadership
Student’s Name
Institution Affiliation
Leadership
Narcissistic leaders are individuals who are only concerned with their social standing, self-actualization, and position within the world. Moreover, narcissistic leaders are self-absorbed and implement actions to improve these aspects, even when it is at the expense of other individuals (Northouse, 2018). Narcissistic leadership may be toxic to the success of an organization since a leader makes decisions centered on their personal needs as opposed to the needs of a company. This destructing effect is more severe if a leader holds a senior position as the forms of the decision they make encompass an increased potential to damage the organization. Machiavellian is a phrase that is associated with a leader who is perceived to be dangerous. Bill Gates exhibited transformational leadership as he was passionate about his work and adhered to a strong vision which assisted in energizing the individuals he worked with at all levels (Meyer & Meijers, 2018). Steve Jobs portrayed an autocratic style of leadership as he had a thorough eye for detail and encircled himself with like-minded individuals to follow his lead. Paul Allen was a positive energizer; as such, he created liveliness and vitality as well as strengthened other individuals around him. The traits in these leaders are positive because they were all geared towards achieving success within their respective organizations. Apple and Microsoft are both successful and renowned organizations across the globe.
References
Meyer, R., & Meijers, R. (2018). Leadership agility : developing yourrepertoire of leadership styles. London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
Northouse, P. G. (2018). Introduction to leadership : concepts and practice. Los Angeles: SAGE.
When should a leader be directive or empowering?
How to develop your own situational theory of
leadership
Henry P. Sims Jr.a,*, Samer Faraj b, Seokhwa Yun c
a Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, U.S.A.
b Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1G5, Canada
c College of Business Administration, Seoul National University, Shinlim Dong, Kwanak Ku, Seoul 151-916,
Republic of Korea
Business Horizons (2009) 52, 149—158
www.elsevier.com/locate/bushor
KEYWORDS
Leadership;
Situational;
Situational leadership;
Contingency theory;
Empowering
Abstract A situational theory of leadership attempts to match a particular leader-
ship style or type to specific external circumstances. The general idea is that one type
of leadership will be effective in one situation, but a different type of leadership will
be effective in another situation. Historically, situational theories of leadership have
been too abstract to apply to specific situations. Nevertheless, the concept of
situational leadership retains considerable intuitive appeal. .
Article Reflection- Read- The third new way- A new source of leadershi.pdfaakarshanelectronic
Article Reflection: Read: The third new way: A new source of leadership by Drath. How does
this compare to the readings from the text. This book is about what it takes to lead. Everyone, at
some time in life, is asked to be a leader, whether to lead a classroom discussion, coach a
children's soccer team, or direct a fund-raising campaign. Many situations require leadership.
Leadership, according to Rost ( 1991 ), is a mutual influence process, involving both leaders and
followers. But, in every leadership situation, expectations and demands are placed upon one or
more individuals to initiate and take responsibility for a decision, an event, or another need. A
leader may have a high profile (e.g., an elected public official) or a low profile (e.g., a volunteer
leader in Big. Brothers Big Sisters), but in every situation, leadership demands are placed on the
individual who is the leader. Being a leader is challenging, exciting, and rewarding, and carries
with it many responsibilities. This chapter discusses different ways of looking at leadership and
their impacts on what it means to be a leader. LEADERSHIP EXPLAINED At the outset, it is
important to address a basic question: What is leadenbip? Scholars who study leadership have
struggled with this question for many decades and have written a great deal about the nature of
leadership (Antonakis, Cianciolo, \& Sternberg, 2004; Bass, 1990; Conger \& Riggio, 2007).
(See Box 1.1.) In leadership litenture, more than 100 different definitions of leadership have
been identified (Rost, 1991). Despite these many definitions, a number of concepts are
recognized by most people as accurately reflecting what it is to be a leader. "Leadership is a
Trait" First, leadership is thought of as a trait. A trait is a distinguishing quality of an individual,
and defining leadership as a trait means that each individual brings to the table certain qualities
that influence the way he or she leads. Some leaders are confident, some are decisive, and still
others are outgoing and sociable. Saying that leadership is a trait places a great deal of emphasis
on the leader and on the leader's special gifts. It follows the INTRODUCTION Why are some
people leaders while others are not? What makes people become leaders? Do leaders have
certain traits? These questions have been of interest for many years. It scems that all of us want
to know what characteristics account for effective leadership. This chapter will address the taits
that are important to leadership. Since the early 20 th century, hundreds of research studies have
been conducted on the traits of leaders. These studies have produced an extensive list of ideal
leadership traits (see Antonakis, Cianciolo, \& Sternberg. 2004; Bass, 1990). The list of
important leadership traits is long and includes such traits as diligence, trustworthiness,
dependability, articulateness, sociability, open-mindedness, intelligence, confidence, self-
assurance, and conscientiousness. Beca.
1
Introduction
Leadership is a highly sought-after and highly valued commodity. In the 1 5 years since the first edition of this book was published, the
public has become increasingly captivated by the idea of leadership.
People continue to ask themselves and others what makes good leaders. As
individuals, they seek more information on how to become effective
leaders. As a result, bookstore shelves are filled with popular books about
leaders and ad,·ice on how to be a leader. Many people belie,·e that
leadership is a way to improve their personal, social, and professional lives.
Corporations seek those with leadership ability because they believe they
bring special assets to their organizations and, ultimately, improve the
bottom line. Academic institutions throughout the country have responded
by providing programs in leadership studies.
In addition, leadership has gained the attention of researche rs worldwide.
A review ofthe scholarly studies on leadership shows that there is a wide variety
of different theoretical approaches to explain the complexities of the leader
ship process (e.g., Bass, 1990; Bryman, 1992; Bl)'Tllan, Collinson, Grint, Jack
son & Uhl-Bien, 201 I ; Day & Antonakis, 2012; Gardner, 1990; Hickman.
2009; Mumford, 2006; Rost, 1991 ). Some researchers conceptualize leader
ship as a trait or as a behavior, whereas others view leadership from an infor
mation-processing perspective or relational standpoinl Leadership has been
studied using both qualitative and quantitative methods in many contexts,
including small groups, therapeutic groups, and large organizations. Collec
ti,·ely, the research findings on leadership from all of these areas provide a
picture ofa process that is far more sophisticated and complex than the often
simplistic view presented in some of the popular books on leadership.
This book treats leadership as a complex process having multiple
dimensions. Based on the research literature, this text provides an in-depth
I Cl) 1.1 FmPrninn Pr;>rtirP< I 'GEt 1 ? I ,:~;art~r<hin in Nurdnn
2 LEADERSHIP I TH EO RY AND PRACTICE
description and application of many different approaches to leadership.
Our emphasis is on how theory can inform the practice of leadership. In
this book, we describe each theory and then explain how the theory can be
used in real situations.
LEADERSHIP DEFINED
There are many ways to finish the sentence, "Leadership is...." In fact, as
Stogdill ( 1974, p. 7) pointed o ut in a review of leadership research, there
are almost as many different definitions of leadership as there are people
who have tried to define it. It is much like the words democracy, love, and
peace. Although each of us intuitively knows what we mean by such words,
the words can have different meanings for different people. As Box 1.1
shows, scholars and practitioners have attempted to define leadership for
more than a century without universal consensus.
Box 1.1 The Evolut ...
1 Introduction Leadership is a highly sought-after aAbbyWhyte974
1
Introduction
Leadership is a highly sought-after and highly valued commodity. In the 1 5 years since the first edition of this book was published, the
public has become increasingly captivated by the idea of leadership.
People continue to ask themselves and others what makes good leaders. As
individuals, they seek more information on how to become effective
leaders. As a result, bookstore shelves are filled with popular books about
leaders and ad,·ice on how to be a leader. Many people belie,·e that
leadership is a way to improve their personal, social, and professional lives.
Corporations seek those with leadership ability because they believe they
bring special assets to their organizations and, ultimately, improve the
bottom line. Academic institutions throughout the country have responded
by providing programs in leadership studies.
In addition, leadership has gained the attention of researche rs worldwide.
A review ofthe scholarly studies on leadership shows that there is a wide variety
of different theoretical approaches to explain the complexities of the leader
ship process (e.g., Bass, 1990; Bryman, 1992; Bl)'Tllan, Collinson, Grint, Jack
son & Uhl-Bien, 201 I ; Day & Antonakis, 2012; Gardner, 1990; Hickman.
2009; Mumford, 2006; Rost, 1991 ). Some researchers conceptualize leader
ship as a trait or as a behavior, whereas others view leadership from an infor
mation-processing perspective or relational standpoinl Leadership has been
studied using both qualitative and quantitative methods in many contexts,
including small groups, therapeutic groups, and large organizations. Collec
ti,·ely, the research findings on leadership from all of these areas provide a
picture ofa process that is far more sophisticated and complex than the often
simplistic view presented in some of the popular books on leadership.
This book treats leadership as a complex process having multiple
dimensions. Based on the research literature, this text provides an in-depth
I Cl) 1.1 FmPrninn Pr;>rtirP< I 'GEt 1 ? I ,:~;art~r<hin in Nurdnn
2 LEADERSHIP I TH EO RY AND PRACTICE
description and application of many different approaches to leadership.
Our emphasis is on how theory can inform the practice of leadership. In
this book, we describe each theory and then explain how the theory can be
used in real situations.
LEADERSHIP DEFINED
There are many ways to finish the sentence, "Leadership is...." In fact, as
Stogdill ( 1974, p. 7) pointed o ut in a review of leadership research, there
are almost as many different definitions of leadership as there are people
who have tried to define it. It is much like the words democracy, love, and
peace. Although each of us intuitively knows what we mean by such words,
the words can have different meanings for different people. As Box 1.1
shows, scholars and practitioners have attempted to define leadership for
more than a century without universal consensus.
Box 1.1 The Evolut ...
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Sample Of Leadership Philosophy
you will evaluate the history of cryptography from its origins. Ana.docxmattjtoni51554
you will evaluate the history of cryptography from its origins. Analyze how cryptography was used and describe how it grew within history. Look at reasons why cryptography was used and how it developed over the years. Was it used or implemented differently in varying cultures?
need it in two pages.
No plagarism
.
You will do this project in a group of 5 or less. Each group or in.docxmattjtoni51554
You will do this project in a group of 5 or less. Each group or individual will sign up to present on a public health issue and intervention of their choice. They will provide background information on the public health issue and explain why it is relevant and/or prevalent. They will also determine if some of the factors discussed throughout the course (i.e. urbanization, vulnerable populations, health disparities, social determinants of health, public health ethics, health literacy, etc.) were major factors in the development and implementation of the intervention that they choose to highlight. The groups or individuals will prepare a presentation of their information as well as a paper to depict their findings. The presentation can be in any form including, but not limited to, a PowerPoint presentation, a Prezi, a website, a video recording, etc.
My assigned part.
vulnerable populations Morolake
health disparities Morolake
social determinants of health, public health ethics Morolake
PPT
THE IMPLEMENTATION PLAN THAT WAS USED TO FORMULATE THE COMMUNICATION CAMPAIGN
3 slides excluding the references
.
you will discuss the use of a tool for manual examination of a .docxmattjtoni51554
you will discuss the use of a tool for manual examination of a phone:
Example tools used
Hardware tools
1.Project-A-Phone
2. Fernico ZRT
3. Eclipse Screen Capture Tool
4.Cellebrite USB camera
Software solution tools
1. ScreenHunter
2. Snagit
Select one of the tools mentioned in the text and describe the tools functionality and process used in an examination of a device.
Using the Internet, research the web for an article related to the tool and answer the following questions:
What are some of the advantages or disadvantages of the tool?
Discuss the tools setup
Appraise the value of the tool in gathering evidence for the prosecution
.
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Sample Of Leadership Philosophy
you will evaluate the history of cryptography from its origins. Ana.docxmattjtoni51554
you will evaluate the history of cryptography from its origins. Analyze how cryptography was used and describe how it grew within history. Look at reasons why cryptography was used and how it developed over the years. Was it used or implemented differently in varying cultures?
need it in two pages.
No plagarism
.
You will do this project in a group of 5 or less. Each group or in.docxmattjtoni51554
You will do this project in a group of 5 or less. Each group or individual will sign up to present on a public health issue and intervention of their choice. They will provide background information on the public health issue and explain why it is relevant and/or prevalent. They will also determine if some of the factors discussed throughout the course (i.e. urbanization, vulnerable populations, health disparities, social determinants of health, public health ethics, health literacy, etc.) were major factors in the development and implementation of the intervention that they choose to highlight. The groups or individuals will prepare a presentation of their information as well as a paper to depict their findings. The presentation can be in any form including, but not limited to, a PowerPoint presentation, a Prezi, a website, a video recording, etc.
My assigned part.
vulnerable populations Morolake
health disparities Morolake
social determinants of health, public health ethics Morolake
PPT
THE IMPLEMENTATION PLAN THAT WAS USED TO FORMULATE THE COMMUNICATION CAMPAIGN
3 slides excluding the references
.
you will discuss the use of a tool for manual examination of a .docxmattjtoni51554
you will discuss the use of a tool for manual examination of a phone:
Example tools used
Hardware tools
1.Project-A-Phone
2. Fernico ZRT
3. Eclipse Screen Capture Tool
4.Cellebrite USB camera
Software solution tools
1. ScreenHunter
2. Snagit
Select one of the tools mentioned in the text and describe the tools functionality and process used in an examination of a device.
Using the Internet, research the web for an article related to the tool and answer the following questions:
What are some of the advantages or disadvantages of the tool?
Discuss the tools setup
Appraise the value of the tool in gathering evidence for the prosecution
.
you will discuss sexuality, popular culture and the media. What is .docxmattjtoni51554
you will discuss sexuality, popular culture and the media. What is social and sexual norms? What would you consider the ideal sexual behavior and pattern with regards to sexuality and society? Be sure to use your textbook as a reference and submit your initial posting with citations and references at a minimum of 200 words by Thursday.
.
You will discuss assigned questions for the ModuleWeek. · Answe.docxmattjtoni51554
You will discuss assigned questions for the Module/Week.
· Answers to questions must be supported with research and citations. It is not unusual, for instance, to have 3–4 citations per paragraph in doctoral-level research.
· Remember also that writing a research paper, especially at the doctoral-level, requires you to weave in ideas from numerous sources and then in turn synthesizing those ideas to create fresh insights and knowledge.
Specifics:
· 10-12 pages of content, double-spaced
· Must include citations from all readings and presentations for the assigned module (including the Fischer presentations and readings) and at least 15 scholarly sources
· Must include Biblical integration (the Fischer sources will help to that end)
· Current APA format
Module/Week 5 Essay
Discuss the following:
· Define governance.
· What are some of the connotations of the term governance as well?
· What is meant by “good” governance?
· Provide a Biblical perspective on governance in the public administration context.
Essay Paper Grading Rubric
Criteria
Levels of Achievement
Content
(70%)
Advanced
94-100%
Proficient
88-93%
Developing
1-87%
Not present
Total
Content
42.5 to 45 points
:
· Thoroughly answers each assigned question.
· Provides a well-reasoned synthesis of key ideas.
39.5 to 42 points
:
· Answers each assigned question.
· Provides some synthesis of key ideas.
1 to 39 points
:
· Fails to answer one or more questions.
· Largely fails to provide a meaningful synthesis of key ideas.
0 points
Not present
Research & Support
42.5 to 45 points
:
· Goes beyond required reading to provide an in-depth, researched discussion of the assigned questions.
· Supports assertions with research and numerous citations from all required reading, presentations, and scholarly source material.
39.5 to 42 points
:
· For the most part, goes beyond required reading to provide a discussion of the assigned questions.
· For the most part, supports assertions with research and citations.
1 to 39 points
:
· Largely fails to go beyond the required reading to answer questions.
· Limited use of research and citations to support assertions.
0 points
Not present
Biblical Integration
30.5 to 32.5 points
:
Provides a nuanced discussion of Biblical concepts as related to the content and assigned questions.
28.5 to 30 points
:
For the most part, provides a discussion of Biblical concepts as related to the content and assigned questions.
1 to 28 points
:
Provides only a limited discussion of Biblical concepts as related to the content and assigned questions.
0 points
Not present
Structure (30%)
Advanced
94-100%
Proficient
88-93%
Developing
1-87%
Not present
Total
Sources & Citations
19 to 20 points:
· All required readings and presentations from the current and prior modules must be cited.
· At least 15 scholarly sources are used.
17.5 to 18.5 points:
· Most of the required readings and present.
You will develop a proposed public health nursing intervention to me.docxmattjtoni51554
You will develop a proposed public health nursing intervention to meet an identified need and/ or gap in your own community. This must be within the scope of the staff level public health/ community health nurse. (Note: you cannot propose building facilities or purchasing a mobile health van). The intervention should demonstrate your application of previous learning in the program related to process improvement and evidence based nursing practice. Quality peer reviewed references are required to support the need as well as the structure, elements, and evaluation of the intervention.Focus on your own local community. You will use resources found in CANVAS, FSW library, and the web to develop this project. Note that census and other epidemiological data is not available down to zip codes or census tracts in Florida- only by county and/ or city & state.
Community Data Collection Survey – THIS IS THE FIRST STEP IN TO COMPLETE YOUR FINAL PAPER. Community Data Collection Survey
Collect relevant data about your community covering the required areas in the survey tool. References are required to support the data. The final part of the Survey is your summary of the identified gap/ need that will be the focus of a targeted public health nursing intervention in your Community Assessment Project. The Data Assessment Form is in Course Resources in Modules. The form is a tool to assist you collect your data and information.
This is a scholarly paper with appropriate use of tables (see APA Manual for how to format and label tables).
Utilize the resources and web sites located in Course Resources in Canvas. In addition, Community Health Assessments are usually published by your county and/ city with relevant information. The data is usually based on county and/ city information. You can also look at Robert Wood Johnson Foundation information on public health issues that may be applicable to your area. Many resources are provided in Course Resources as a starting point for your data collection. DO NOT Submit the tool... this is a paper.
NUR 4636C Community Health Nursing Assessment Tool v2-1.docx
PAPER CONTENT:
Community Being Assessed
Vital Statistics
Births
Deaths
Causes of mortality and morbidity
Leading infectious diseases
Number of healthy days
3. Social Determinants of Health
Access to health care
Housing
Employment
Environment -Water and Air quality, pollution
Safety- police, fire
Education systems
Recreation
Government role in health access/ provision
Issue/ need identified.
includes at least 5 references from current peer-reviewed nursing journals and /or textbook or reliable education, government or organizational website.
This is for the Lee county area.
.
You will develop a comprehensive literature search strategy. After r.docxmattjtoni51554
You will develop a comprehensive literature search strategy. After reviewing Chapter 5 in
How To Do A Systematic Literature Review In Nursing: A Step-By-Step Guide
(Bettany-Saltikov, 2012), address the following:
Identify each step involved in the comprehensive literature search strategy
Outline each step as it applies to your capstone
Next, you will locate two existing scholarly articles that are Attached and show evidence of (1) properly paraphrasing and citing the abstract, and (2) directly quoting two sentences from the abstract
(with proper attribution). Be sure to include a reference list that corresponds with your general citation and direct quote citation. You do
not
need a title page.
Please keep in mind that I am looking for evidence of understanding the difference between properly
paraphrasing conten
t and a
direct quote
. Both require its respective in-text citation.
In two diferent paragraph give your personal opinion to Jordan Paltani and Felita Daniel-sacagiu
Jordan Paltani
Write What is Right
Each step involved in the comprehensive literature search strategy include evaluating references to help find ideas of sources to use, searching by hand to avoid bias, reading “grey” conference proceedings and/or PhD theses, and contacting authors to get access to unpublished literature.
Each step as it applies to my capstone would be first looking at references from the online article
Study: the kidney shortage kills more than 40,000 people a year
, searching in library books starting with organ donation and leading to the shortage of organs, finding doctors who specialize in kidney transplant and see what their PhD thesis was based up, and contacting Dr. Pasavento who wrote the article
Facing Organ Donor Shortage, Patients Forced to Get Creative
.
The article
The Organ Shortage Crisis in America : Incentives, Civic Duty, and Closing the Gap
discusses how the cadaveric kidney donors are becoming insufficient to meet the needs of those in need of a transplant. The author states
“Nearly 120,000 people are in need of healthy organs in the United States (Flescher, 2018).”
It explains how they are trying to increase living donors to donate to those in need either related or unrelated (Flescher, 2018). The author states,
“Every ten minutes a new name is added to the list, while on average twenty people die each day waiting for an organ to become available.”
With that being said, some ideas include paying those for their kidneys or having them just spend a day at dialysis with a patient.
The article
Relieving the kidney donor shortage
, discusses how kidney transplantation is the only treatment for kidney failure. Having a kidney transplant is cheaper than dialysis, which is only a Band-Aid for kidney failure. Financial incentives are currently an idea to have the amount of living donors increase. This can be beneficial for both the donor and the recipient. The autho.
You will develop a formal information paper that addresses the l.docxmattjtoni51554
You will develop a formal information paper that addresses the legal basis of current Department of Homeland Security jurisdiction, mission, and responsibilities. You will need to specifically analyze hazards, to include manmade or technological and naturally occurring hazards, and terrorism, domestic and foreign, in the information paper.
You are an action officer in your local jurisdiction's Office of Homeland Security. This is a recently created office. As a medium-size jurisdiction, the city manager's office has dual responsibilities in many of the leadership and management positions. This is often referred to as being dual-hatted. The chief of police has been assigned as the director of the Office of Homeland Security for the city. She has no prior experience or knowledge of the requirements involved in homeland security and has asked you to provide a formal report on the topic. The chief intends to share this report with other office managers, city department heads, the city manager, and the elected officials of the city (mayor and city council).
Your report is an information paper and should be formatted as such. The report should address the following items:
The legal basis of current Department of Homeland Security jurisdiction, mission, and responsibilities
Legal definitions of hazards, to include manmade or technological and naturally occurring hazards
Legal definitions of terrorism, domestic and foreign
Review of state law and statutes (using your home or residency state) as it applies to hazards
Review of state law and statutes (using your home or residency state) as it applies to terrorism
Summarize your top 5 key points
Provide any recommendations that you may have to your city's leadership concerning homeland security issues
Reference all source material and citations using APA 6th edition
.
You will design a patient education tool that can be used by nurses .docxmattjtoni51554
You will design a patient education tool that can be used by nurses for teaching patients
using computer applications
. You will then present your tool to the class and explain the purpose, how you created it, reasoning for your choice of applications, and provide current evidence of the effectiveness of this patient education. This presentation is 5-10 minutes.
Assignment File(s)
Patient Education Project and Presentation
[Word Document]
Rubric
NM 208 Patient Education Project Tool
NM 208 Patient Education Project ToolCriteriaRatingsPtsThis criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeUse of Computer Applications
20.0
to >17.0
ptsHigh ProficiencyCreative, innovative, effective use of computer applications17.0
to >14.0
ptsModerately High ProficiencyEffective use of computer applications14.0
to >10.0
ptsProficient PointsIneffective use of computer use of applications10.0
to >0
ptsLow-Level Proficiency/Non-ProficientLacking use of computer applications
20.0 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeOrganization
20.0
to >17.0
ptsHigh ProficiencyExtremely well organized; logical format that was easy to follow; flowed smoothly from one idea to another and cleverly conveyed; the organization enhanced the effectiveness of the project17.0
to >14.0
ptsModerately High ProficiencyWell organized; logical format that was easy to follow; flowed smoothly from one idea to another and conveyed; the organization enhanced the effectiveness of the project14.0
to >10.0
ptsProficient PointsSomewhat organized; ideas were not presented coherently and transitions were not always smooth, which at times distracted the audience10.0
to >0
ptsLow-Level Proficiency/Non-ProficientChoppy and confusing; format was difficult to follow transitions of ideas were abrupt and seriously distracted the audience
20.0 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeContent Accuracy
20.0
to >17.0
ptsHigh Proficiency100 % of the facts are accurate17.0
to >14.0
ptsModerately High Proficiency99-90% of the facts are accurate14.0
to >10.0
ptsProficient Points89-80% of the facts are accurate10.0
to >0
ptsLow-Level Proficiency/Non-ProficientFewer than 80% of facts are accurate
20.0 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeResearch
20.0
to >17.0
ptsHigh ProficiencyWent above and beyond to research information; solicited material in addition to what was provided; brought in personal ideas and information to enhance project; and utilized variety of resources to make project effective17.0
to >14.0
ptsModerately High ProficiencyDid a very good job of researching; utilized materials provided to their full potential; solicited adequate resources to enhance project; at time took the initiative to find information outside of school.14.0
to >10.0
ptsProficient PointsUsed the material provided in an acceptable manner, but did not consult any additional resources10.0
to >0
ptsLow-Level Proficiency/Non-ProficientDid not utilize resources effectively.
You will design a patient education tool that can be used by nur.docxmattjtoni51554
You will design a patient education tool that can be used by nurses for teaching patients
using computer applications.
You will then present your tool to the class and explain the purpose, how you created it, reasoning for your choice of applications, and provide current evidence of the effectiveness of this patient education. This presentation is 5-10 minutes.
DUE DATE:
Total Points: 200
Patient Education Project Tool Rubric - 100 points
Points
18-20
14-17
10-16
0
Comments
Use of Computer Applications
Creative, innovative, effective use of computer applications
Effective use of computer applications
Ineffective use of computer use of applications
Lacking use of computer applications
Organization
Extremely well organized; logical format that was easy to follow; flowed smoothly from one idea to another and cleverly conveyed; the organization enhanced the effectiveness of the project
Well organized; logical format that was easy to follow; flowed smoothly from one idea to another and conveyed; the organization enhanced the effectiveness of the project
Somewhat organized; ideas were not presented coherently and transitions were not always smooth, which at times distracted the audience
Choppy and confusing; format was difficult to follow transitions of ideas were abrupt and seriously distracted the audience
Content Accuracy
100 % of the facts are accurate
99-90% of the facts are accurate
89-80% of the facts are accurate
Fewer than 80% of facts are accurate
Research
Went above and beyond to research information; solicited material in addition to what was provided; brought in personal ideas and information to enhance project; and utilized variety of resources to make project effective
Did a very good job of researching; utilized materials provided to their full potential; solicited adequate resources to enhance project; at time took the initiative to find information outside of school.
Used the material provided in an acceptable manner, but did not consult any additional resources
Did not utilize resources effectively; did little or no fact gathering on the topic
Creativity
Was extremely clever and presented with originality; a unique approach that truly enhanced the project
Was clever at times; thoughtfully and uniquely presented
Added a few original touches to enhance the project but did not incorporate them throughout
Little creative energy used during this project; was bland, predictable, and lacked “zip”
Patient Education Project Class Presentation Rubric: 100 points
Points
18-20
14-17
10-13
5-9
0-4
Comments
Voice
Speaker uses appropriate pitch, volume, and rate of speaking. Articulation excellent.
Hasty conversational style; does not interfere with volume or articulation. Communication is unhampered.
Low volume; hasty conversational style compromises artic.
You will create an entire Transformational Change Management Plan fo.docxmattjtoni51554
You will create an entire Transformational Change Management Plan for a medium-sized public company that has lost business to a competitor that has chosen to outsource much of its production operations. The company has been based in a small Midwestern town, it is one of the largest employers, and it has an excellent reputation for employee welfare. It is now planning to do the very same offshoring, which will involve large layoffs of long-term employees.
week 4: Communication Plan (100–150 words)
Include the following context in the communication plan:
What stakeholders require communication?
What will be communicated to them?
Who will send the communication?
What communication medium will be used?
.
You will create an Access School Management System Database that can.docxmattjtoni51554
You will create an Access School Management System Database that can be used to store, retrieve update and delete the staff/student.
Design an Access database to maintain information about school staff and students satisfying the following properties:
1. The staff should have the following: ID#, name, and classes they are teaching
2. The student should have the following: ID#, name, section, class
3. Create a module containing the section, subject and teacher information
4. Create a module containing student fee information
5. Create a module containing the instructors salary
6. Create a module with the classroom assignments (be mindful that each class/lab should not have the same information as another class)
.
You will create a 13 slide powerpoint presentation (including your r.docxmattjtoni51554
You will create a 13 slide powerpoint presentation (including your reference page) about advocating for adoption.
Be creative in developing a presentation that will highlight an issue, choice/decision, or life altering event that may impact someone's life.
You need to have at least 7 credible references
These will need to be noted within the presentation and at the end of the presentation.
.
You will create a 10 minute virtual tour of a cultural museum” that.docxmattjtoni51554
You will create a 10 minute virtual tour of a “cultural museum” that teaches your audience about a particular culture. The museum that you select must be within the United States. For example, The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Ellis Island, Charles H. Wright African American Museum, etc. You will create a “virtual tour” of the museum by creating a PowerPoint presentation with at least one slide dedicated to each “room” of the museum. You must provide the history of the museum through the use of visual imagery. You might choose to display some of the objects/artifacts that would be included in the museum, audio or video clips related to the spaces, or text that might appear on the displays or signs at the museum. Be sure you have a title slide with the name of the museum you chose on it. Your final product should be very creative AND very realistic. You will have to do extensive research on the museum that you choose. Your audience should walk away from your presentation with the feeling that they have just left the museum. The audience should also gain new information about the culture that they did not know before your presentation. You will also need to submit a reference page using APA format. This should be primarily a visual tour. Please limit any text on slides to short headings and/or bullet points. I do not require any citations for images/photos.
.
You will continue the previous discussion by considering the sacred.docxmattjtoni51554
You will continue the previous discussion by considering the sacred/secular divide that is often seen within society today. After watching the presentation titled The Sacred/Secular Divide, interact with your classmates by discussing the following questions:
How does the tendency to push religion away from the public arena effect the Christian’s ability to engage culture?
What are the areas within your own life that depict the sacred/secular divide?
How can the sacred/secular divide be eliminated within your sphere of influence?
In your discussion, indicate to which of the points of the Sacred/Secular Divide you are responding throughout your post.
.
You will craft individual essays in response to the provided prompts.docxmattjtoni51554
You will craft individual essays in response to the provided prompts. You must use the current Turabian style with default margins and 12-pt Times New Roman font. For each essay, include a title page and reference page, also in current Turabian format. You must include citations to a sufficient number of appropriate scholarly sources to fully support your assertions and conclusions (which will likely require more than the minimum number of citations). Each paper must contain at least 5
7 scholarly sources
original to this paper
,
The UN— “A More Perfect Union?”
Considering the readings, video presentations, and your own research, draft a quality 6–7-page research paper on the role, legitimacy, and authority of the UN according to the following prompts, answering in a separate or integrated manner as you wish.
Identify at least 3reasons that states might defend the intrinsic legitimacy of the UN as a governing authority. In reverse, identify at least 3reasons that states might criticize its legitimacy and authority.
In short, make an argument for the limits and possibilities of the UN as a legitimate governing authority in a world of sovereign states.
What is the relationship of the UN to the current international system of states?
Considering the reasons for the creation of the UN after WWII, does it seem driven by political necessity or the political utility? In plainer English, do states need the UN more than the UN needs the states? Or do states both large and small find the UN a useful tool for improving their relative power and legitimacy vis-à-vis other states and global institutions? Is there some position in-between?
Using other sources and extra-Scholar sources (The commentaries, teachings, other writings, etc.) to inform your own reasoning, comment on the compatibility with the idea of
World Government
. [
Attention
: The Instructor does not view the question as rhetorical, nor the answer self-evident. So, reason carefully.] For example, if the logic of collective action under the
Articles of Confederation
—the logic of state sovereignty—failed to secure American liberties as well as the ‘more perfect union’, the new Constitution established by the Framers in 1787 to replace it, effectively requiring states to cede sovereignty to a larger collective authority, why would the same logic of collective action not justify the UN as a ‘more perfect union’ to replace an anarchic system of sovereign states putting the world at risk in a nuclear age?
.
You will complete the Aquifer case,Internal Medicine 14 18-year.docxmattjtoni51554
You will complete the Aquifer case,
Internal Medicine 14: 18-year-old female for pre-college physical
,
focusing on the
“Revisit three months later”
for this assignment.
After completing the Aquifer case, you will present the case and supporting evidence in a PowerPoint presentation with the following components:
Slide 1: Title, Student Name, Course, Date
Slide 2: Summary or synopsis of Judy Pham's case
Slide 3: HPI
Slide 4: Medical History
Slide 5: Family History
Slide 6: Social History
Slide 7: ROS
Slide 8: Examination
Slide 9: Labs (In-house)
Slide 10: Primary Diagnosis and 3 Differential Diagnoses – ranked in priority
Primary Diagnosis should be supported by data in the patient’s history, exam, and lab results.
Slide 11: Management Plan: medication (dose, route, frequency), non-medication treatment, tests ordered, education, follow-up/referral.
Slide 12-16: An evaluation of 5 evidence-based articles applicable to Ms. Pham’s case: evaluate 1 article per slide.
Include title, author, and year of article
Brief summary/purpose of the study
How did the study support Ms. Pham’s case?
Course texts will not count as a scholarly source. If using data from websites you must go back to the literature source for the information; no secondary sources are allowed, e.g. Medscape, UptoDate, etc.
Slide 17: Reference List
You will submit the PowerPoint presentation in the
Submissions Area by the due date assigned. Name your Case Study Presentation SU_NSG6430_W7_A2_lastname_firstinitial.doc
.
You will complete the Aquifer case,Internal Medicine 14 18-.docxmattjtoni51554
You will complete the Aquifer case,
Internal Medicine 14: 18-year-old female for pre-college physical
,
focusing on the
“Revisit three months later”
for this assignment.
After completing the Aquifer case, you will present the case and supporting evidence in a PowerPoint presentation with the following components:
Slide 1: Title, Student Name, Course, Date
Slide 2: Summary or synopsis of Judy Pham's case
Slide 3: HPI
Slide 4: Medical History
Slide 5: Family History
Slide 6: Social History
Slide 7: ROS
Slide 8: Examination
Slide 9: Labs (In-house)
Slide 10: Primary Diagnosis and 3 Differential Diagnoses – ranked in priority
Primary Diagnosis should be supported by data in the patient’s history, exam, and lab results.
Slide 11: Management Plan: medication (dose, route, frequency), non-medication treatment, tests ordered, education, follow-up/referral.
Slide 12-16: An evaluation of 5 evidence-based articles applicable to Ms. Pham’s case: evaluate 1 article per slide.
Include title, author, and year of article
Brief summary/purpose of the study
How did the study support Ms. Pham’s case?
Course texts will not count as a scholarly source. If using data from websites you must go back to the literature source for the information; no secondary sources are allowed, e.g. Medscape, UptoDate, etc.
Slide 17: Reference List
You will submit the PowerPoint presentation in the
Submissions Area by the due date assigned. Name your Case Study Presentation SU_NSG6430_W7_A2_lastname_firstinitial.doc
.
You will complete several steps for this assignment.Step 1 Yo.docxmattjtoni51554
You will complete several steps for this assignment.
Step 1:
You will become familiar with an assessment tool (AChecker) to examine Web accessibility for a couple Web sites. This is a freely available tool that you can learn about by reviewing the tutorial found
here
.
Step 2:
Select two Web sites that are somewhat similar in functionality. Find one that you think is good and one that you think is bad. Whether or not the Web site is good or bad is based upon your own personal perspective.
Step 3:
Examine the Web sites regarding your suggestions as to how they might be improved.
Step 4:
Create a PowerPoint presentation that includes 10–12 slides with voice recording that presents your recommended improvements. Discuss the good and bad factors of each Web site. Discuss how a sample task is supported on each of the Web sites. Describe how the Web site can be redesigned or revised to achieve better results.
The requirements for the presentation are as follows:
Title slide
Introduction to the 2 Web sites
Comparison of the 2 Web sites
A summary of AChecker's findings for each site
Explanation of how to improve the sample task
Listing of recommended improvements
Information regarding anticipated localization and globalization factors
Summary and conclusions
At least 3–5 references
Be sure to consider the following:
Patterns
Wizards
Interactivity
Animation
Transitions
.
You will compile a series of critical analyses of how does divorce .docxmattjtoni51554
You will compile a series of critical analyses of "how does divorce effect the wellness of children?" through the four general education lenses: history, humanities, natural and applied sciences, and social sciences. Using the four lenses, explain "how does divorce effect the wellness of children?" within wellness has or has not influenced modern society.
.
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PersonalityLeadership LinkageThere is a link between an individ.docx
1. Personality/Leadership Linkage
There is a link between an individual’s personality and the
leadership style with which individuals are most comfortable
and therefore more likely to use. The connection between
personality and leadership style has been well noted by several
researchers and leadership specialists (Bass, 2000, 2008; Pillai,
Schriesheim, & Williams, 1999; de Charon, 2003).
It is important to understand your natural leadership style…so
you can capitalize on your natural leadership strengths (or be
aware of and address your natural weaknesses) for your career
development, self-fulfillment and success at the workplace.
Journal of Leadership Education Volume 8, Issue 2 – Fall 2009
114
The 16 personality types created by Myers and Briggs (Myers &
McCaulley, 1985) and adapted by Keirsey and Bates (1984) are
a combination of:
EI (extroversion or introversion)
EI are ways in which people gather energy. E types are people
who recharge when they are around people. I types are those
who need solitude to re-energize.
SN (sensing or intuition)
S types are those who thrive on facts and Ns are those who tend
to make decisions based on hunches.
TF (thinking or feeling)
T types are logical and objective in the decisions they make and
Fs are more subjective and take things personally.
PJ (perceiving or judging).
Ps like to keep their options open and Js prefer deadlines.
2. No type is better than the other. They are all just ways in which
we interact with the world and make decisions. Understanding
these differences can, however, provide insights.
Being a Leader
Everyone, at some time in life, is asked to be a leader, whether
to lead a classroom discussion, coach a children’s soccer team,
or direct a fund-raising campaign. Many situations require
leadership. A leader may have a high profile (e.g., an elected
public official) or a low profile (e.g., a volunteer leader in Big
Brothers Big Sisters), but in every situation there are leadership
demands placed on the individual who is the leader.
Being a leader is challenging, exciting, and rewarding, and
carries with it many responsibilities. This chapter discusses
different ways of looking at leadership and their impacts on
what it means to be a leader.
DEFINING LEADERSHIP
At the outset, it is important to address a basic question: What
is leadership? Scholars who study leadership have struggled
with this question for many decades and have written a great
deal about the nature of leadership (Antonakis, Cianciolo, &
Sternberg, 2004; Bass, 1990; Conger & Riggio, 2007). In
leadership literature, more than 100 different definitions of
leadership have been identified (Rost, 1991). Despite these
many definitions, a number of concepts are recognized by most
people as accurately reflecting what it is to be a leader.
INTRODUCTION TO LEADERSHIP
3. Leadership has long intrigued humankind and has been the topic
of extensive literature for centuries. The earliest writings
include philosophies of leadership such as Machiavelli’s The
Prince (1531), and biographies of great leaders. With the
development of the social sciences during the 20th century,
inquiry into leadership became prolific. Studies on leadership
have emerged from every discipline “that has had some interest
in the subject of leadership: anthropology, business
administration, educational administration, history, military
science, nursing administration, organizational behavior,
philosophy, political science, public administration,
psychology, sociology, and theology” (Rost, 1991, p. 45).
As a result, there are many approaches to leadership. Not unlike
fashion, approaches to leadership have evolved, changed focus
and direction, and built upon one another during the past
century. To understand this evolution a brief historical view can
be helpful:
Trait Approach
The early trait approach theories were called “Great Man”
theories because they focused on identifying the innate qualities
and characteristics possessed by great social, political, and
military leaders such as Catherine the Great, Mohandas Gandhi,
Abraham Lincoln, Moses, and Joan of Arc. Studies of leadership
traits were especially strong from 1900 to the early 1940s and
enjoyed a renewed emphasis beginning in the 1970s as
researchers began to examine visionary and charismatic
leadership. In the 1980s, researchers linked leadership to the
“Big Five” personality factors while interest in emotional
intelligence as a trait gained favor in the 1990s.
Behavior Approach
In the late 1930s, leadership research began to focus on
4. behavior—what leaders do and how they act. Groundbreaking
studies by researchers at The Ohio State University and the
University of Michigan in the
1940s and 1950s analyzed how leaders acted in small group
situations. Behavior approach theories hit their heyday in the
early 1960s with Blake and Moulton’s (1964) work exploring
how managers use task behaviors and relationship behaviors in
the organizational setting.
Situational Approach
The premise of this approach is that different situations demand
different kinds of leadership. Serious examination of situational
approach theories began in the late 1960s by Hersey and
Blanchard and Reddin. Situational approaches continued to be
refined and revised from the 1970s through the 1990s (Vecchio,
1987). One of these, path-goal theory, examines how leaders use
employee motivation to enhance performance and satisfaction.
Another approach, contingency theory, focuses on the match
between the leader’s style and specific situational variables.
Relational Approach
In the 1990s, researchers began examining the nature of
relations between leaders and followers. This research
ultimately evolved into the Leader-Member Exchange (LMX)
Theory. LMX Theory predicts that high-quality relations
generate more positive leader outcomes than lower-quality
relations. Research in the relational approach of leadership
continues to generate moderate interest today.
“New Leadership” Approach
When these approaches began appearing in the mid-1980s—
three decades ago—they were, and continue to be, called “new
leadership” approaches (Bryman, 1992). Beginning in 1985 with
5. the work of Bass and his associates, leadership studies
generated visionary or charismatic leadership theories. From
these approaches developed transformational leadership theory,
which describes leadership as a process that changes people and
organizations.
Emerging Leadership Approaches
A diverse range of approaches to leadership are emerging
during the 21st century. Currently, authentic leadership that
looks at the authenticity of leaders and their leadership is
enjoying strong interest. Similarly, the spiritual leadership
approach examines how leaders use values, a sense of “calling,”
and membership to motivate followers. Servant leadership
emphasizes the “caring principle” with leaders as “servants”
who focus on their followers’ needs in order to help these
followers become more autonomous, knowledgeable, and like
servants themselves. Gender-based studies have gained much
momentum as women continue to become more dominant in the
workforce, especially on a global level. The shrinking of the
world through technology has also been illuminated through the
study of cultural and global approaches to leadership.
This historical timeline is not intended to represent these
approaches as being separate and distinct eras, only to disappear
from the picture when a new theory appears. Instead, many of
these theories occur concurrently, building upon one another.
Even when a certain approach’s period of popularity has waned,
the theory continues to influence further study and the
development of new leadership approaches.
Being a Leader
“LEADERSHIP IS A TRAIT”
First, leadership is thought of as a trait. A trait is a
6. distinguishing quality of an individual, which is often inherited.
Defining leadership as a trait means that each individual brings
to the table certain qualities that influence the way he or she
leads. Some leaders are confident, some are decisive, and still
others are outgoing and sociable. Saying that leadership is a
trait places a great deal of emphasis on the leader and on the
leader’s special gifts. It follows the often-expressed belief
“leaders are born, not made.” Some argue that focusing on traits
makes leadership an elitist enterprise because it implies that
only a few people with special talents will lead. Although there
may be some truth to this argument, it can also be argued that
all of us are born with a wide array of unique traits and that
many of these traits can have a positive impact on our
leadership. It also may be possible to modify or change some
traits.
Through the years, researchers have identified a multitude of
traits that are associated with leadership. In Chapter 2 we will
discuss many of these. Although there are many important
leadership traits, what is most important for leaders is having
the required traits that a particular situation demands. For
example, a chaotic emergency room at a hospital requires a
leader who is insightful and decisive and can bring calm to the
situation. Conversely, a high school classroom in which
students are bored demands a teacher who is inspiring and
creative.
Effective leadership results when the leader engages the right
traits in the right place at the right time.
“LEADERSHIP IS AN ABILITY”
In addition to being thought of as a trait, leadership is
conceptualized as an ability. A person who has leadership
ability is able to be a leader—that is, has the capacity to lead.
While the term ability frequently refers to a natural capacity,
7. ability can be acquired.
For example, some people are naturally good at public speaking,
while others rehearse to become comfortable speaking in public.
Similarly, some people have the natural physical ability to excel
in a sport, while others develop their athletic capacity through
exercise and practice. In leadership, some people have the
natural ability to lead, while others develop their leadership
abilities through hard work and practice.
An example of leadership as ability is the legendary University
of California at Los Angeles basketball coach John Wooden,
whose teams won seven consecutive National Collegiate
Athletic Association titles.
Described first as a teacher and then as a coach, Wooden
implemented four laws of learning into his coaching:
explanation, demonstration, imitation, and repetition. His goal
was to teach players how to do the right thing instinctively
under great pressure. Less visible or well known, but also an
example of leadership as ability, is the unheralded but highly
effective restaurant manager who, through years of experience
and learning, is able to create a successful, award-winning
restaurant.
In both of these examples, it is the individuals’ abilities that
create outstanding leadership.
“LEADERSHIP IS A SKILL”
Third, leadership is a skill. Conceptualized as a skill, leadership
is a competency developed to accomplish a task effectively.
Skilled leaders are competent people who know the means and
methods for carrying out their responsibilities. For example, a
skilled leader in a fund-raising campaign knows every step and
procedure in the fund-raising process and is able to use this
knowledge to run an effective campaign. In short, skilled
leaders are competent—they know what they need to do, and
they know how to do it.
8. Describing leadership as a skill makes leadership available to
everyone because skills are competencies that people can learn
or develop. Even without natural leadership ability, people can
improve their leadership with practice, instruction, and
feedback from others. Viewed as a skill, leadership can be
studied and learned. If you are capable of learning from
experience, you can acquire leadership.
“LEADERSHIP IS A BEHAVIOR”
Leadership is also a behavior. It is what leaders do when they
are in a leadership role. The behavioral dimension is concerned
with how leaders act toward others in various situations. Unlike
traits, abilities, and skills, leadership behaviors are observable.
When someone leads, we see that person’s leadership behavior.
Research on leadership has shown that leaders engage primarily
in two kinds of general behaviors: task behaviors and process
behaviors. Task behaviors are used by leaders to get the job
done
(e.g., a leader prepares an agenda for a meeting). Process
behaviors are used by leaders to help people feel comfortable
with other group members and at ease in the situations in which
they find themselves
(e.g., a leader helps individuals in a group to feel included).
Since leadership requires both task and process behaviors, the
challenge for leaders is to know the best way to combine them
in their efforts to reach a goal.
“LEADERSHIP IS A RELATIONSHIP”
Another, and somewhat unusual, way to think about leadership
is as a relationship. From this perspective, leadership is
centered on the communication between leaders and followers
9. rather than on the unique qualities of the leader. Thought of as a
relationship, leadership becomes a process of collaboration that
occurs between leaders and followers (Rost, 1991). A leader
affects and is affected by followers, and both leader and
followers are affected in turn by the situation that surrounds
them. This approach emphasizes that leadership is not a linear
one-way event, but rather an interactive event. In traditional
leadership, authority is often top down; in the interactive type
of leadership, authority and influence are shared. When
leadership is defined in this manner, it becomes available to
everyone. It is not restricted to the formally designated leader
in a group.
Thinking of leadership as a relationship suggests that leaders
must include followers and their interests in the process of
leadership. A leader needs to be fully aware of the followers
and the followers’ interests, ideas, positions, attitudes, and
motivations. In addition, this approach has an ethical overtone
because it stresses the need for leaders to work with followers
to achieve their mutual purposes. Stressing mutuality lessens
the possibility that leaders might act toward followers in ways
that are forced or unethical. It also increases the possibility that
leaders and followers will work together toward a common good
(Rost, 1991).
“LEADERSHIP IS AN INFLUENCE PROCESS”
A final way of thinking about leadership is as an influence
process. This is the perspective that will be emphasized in this
book.
Leadership is a process whereby an individual influences a
group of individuals to achieve a common goal.
Defining leadership as an influence process means that it is not
a trait or an ability that resides in the leader, but rather an
10. interactive event that occurs between the leader and the
followers. Influence is central to the process of leadership
because leaders affect followers. Leaders direct their energies
toward influencing individuals to achieve something together.
Stressing common goals gives leadership an ethical dimension
because it lessens the possibility that leaders might act toward
followers in ways that use coercion or are unethical.
GLOBAL LEADERSHIP ATTRIBUTES
We probably all wonder at the differences in leadership around
the world. Why do some countries gravitate toward the
distributed leadership of a democracy, while others seem
content with the hierarchical leadership of a monarchy or
dictatorship? The definition and concepts of leadership outlined
in this chapter are from an American perspective. If you were to
travel to nations across the world, you would no doubt
encounter different views of leadership specific to those ethnic
and political cultures.
PRACTICING LEADERSHIP
There is a strong demand for effective leadership in society
today. This demand exists at the local and community levels, as
well as at the national level, in this country and abroad. People
feel the need for leadership in all aspects of their lives. They
want leaders in their personal lives, at school, in the work
setting, and even in their spiritual lives. Everywhere you turn,
people are expressing a need for strong leadership.
When people ask for leadership in a particular situation, it is
not always clear exactly what they want. For the most part,
however, they want effective leadership. Effective leadership is
intended influence that creates change for the greater good.
Leadership uses positive means to achieve positive outcomes.
11. Furthermore, people want leaders who listen to and understand
their needs and who can relate to their circumstances. The
challenge for each of us is to be prepared to lead when we are
asked to be the leader.
All of us at some time in our lives will be asked to show
leadership. When you are asked to be the leader, it will be both
demanding and rewarding. How you approach leadership is
strongly influenced by your definitions of and beliefs about
leadership. Through the years, writers have defined leadership
in a multitude of ways. It is a complex, multidimensional
process that is often conceptualized in a variety of ways by
different people. Some of the most common ways of looking at
leadership are as a trait, an ability, a skill, a behavior, a
relationship, or a process. The way you think about leadership
will influence the way you practice leadership.
Sources/references:
Antonakis, J., Cianciolo, A. T., & Sternberg, R. J. (Eds.).
(2004). The nature of leadership. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Bass, B. M. (1990). Bass and Stogdill’s handbook of leadership:
A survey of theory and research. New York: Free Press.
Blake, R. R., & Moulton, J. S. (1964). The managerial grid.
Houston, TX: Gulf.
Bryman, A. (1992). Charisma and leadership in organizations.
London: Sage.
Conger, J. A., & Riggio, R. E. (Eds.). (2007). The practice of
leadership: Developing the next generation of leaders. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Hill earns 500th win as Pioneer boys swim coach. (2009,
12. January 24).
Ann Arbor News staff report. Retrieved December 10, 2010,
from
http://highschoolsports.mlive.com/news/article/101769104/hill-
earns-500th-win-as-pioneer-boys-swim-coach/
House, R. J., Hanges, P. J., Javidan, M., Dorfman, P. W., &
Gupta, V.(2004). Culture, leadership, and organizations: The
GLOBE study of 62 societies. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
McCabe, M. (2003, June 20). Pioneer coach turns pool of talent
into titles. Detroit Free Press, p. 8D.
Rost, J. C. (1991). Leadership for the twenty-first century.
Westport, CO: Praeger.
Vecchio, R. P. (1987). Situational leadership theory: An
examination of a prescriptive theory. Journal of Applied
Psychology, 72(3), 444–451.
Researching Leadership Theory
In researching leadership theories, there is no shortage of
material, articles and books that outline the history of
leadership theory development (Bolden et al 2003; Northouse,
2007; Bass, 2008). This phenomenal amount of literature
reflects the vast array of different approaches being aired
(Storey, 2004) as well as the wealth of knowledge that exists.
There are “trait, behavioural, situational and attribution theories
[…] visionary, ethical, charismatic, and transactional versus
transformational” theories (Abramson, 2007:115). Classical
leadership theories have evolved through the 20th century from
personality based, to behavioral to context based theories
(Nahavandi, 2006). The majority of the literature seems to agree
on the main developments in the history of leadership theory.
13. While the wealth of information is great, and many of the
writings present coherent themes, there does not appear to be a
single, exhaustive list of the major theories of leadership. To
date, the most comprehensive work in this field is Yukl’s
review of managerial leadership (1989) and House and Aditya’s
review of leadership theories (1997). Thus, in order to better
understand where the development of leadership theory stands
today, the first challenge was the creation of a coherent outline
of the theories of leadership to date. The choice of a
chronological order has been made because existing knowledge
influences knowledge being developed. This was needed to
allow the wealth of academic knowledge to be placed in the
reality of the field. An historical chronology offers the most
realistic setting to review the development of leadership
theories.
The Classic Leadership theories
Table 1 outlines these leadership theories applicable to the field
in chronological (as much as is possible) order.
Leadership Theory
Outline description
Main writers
Great Man
The original leadership approach of leaders being born not
made. Those certain individuals have exceptional qualities and
are destined to lead. The situation brings out the leader.
Trait
People have certain natural traits which are more suited to
leadership. Leadership traits can be listed. It is the combination
of the right traits which makes a leader.
Stodgill, 1974
Behavioural
Leaders are made and not born. Leadership can be defined into
certain behaviours which can be learned and developed
14. Skinner, 1967
Bandura, 1982
Situational/
Contingency
Situational theory sees leaders adapting their styles to the
context and development level of their followers. Contingency
theory proposes that it is situational factors together with the
leaders style which determine the success of a leader.
Fiedler, 1964
House, 1974 Hersey, Blanchard, 1972
Path-Goal Theory
The successful leaders create structural paths which help
followers attain their work goals
House, 1971
Charismatic
The personal charisma of an individual creates an intense
emotional attachment for their followers.
Weber, 1947, House, 1977
Conger, Kanungo, 1994
Transactional
Emphasis is placed on the leader-follower relation. It is the
transactions (reward, punishment) which are the best way for
leaders to motivate the performance of their followers
Burns, 1978
Bass, 1985
Transformational
Leadership is based on the sharing of a vision which motivates
and directs the followers
Burns, 1978
Bass, 1985
15. Cognitive
Leaders who by word or personal example influence the
behaviour, thoughts or feelings of their followers
Gardner 1996
Servant
The leadership role is most successful if they serve those they
lead
Greenleaf, 1977
Authentic
That the root of any leadership theory is the need for a leader to
be authentic, to be self-aware.
Avolio, Gardner, 2005
Complexity
Leadership takes place in a system of complex interactive
dynamics has three entangled roles (adaptive, administrative,
enabling) which reflect the dynamic relationship between
organisational functions and context
Uhl-Bien et la. 2007
Cross-Cultural
Leadership which takes place in a multi-cultural setting or
across national boundaries
e-Leadership
Leadership which takes place in a AIT (Advanced Information
Technology) environment where leadership influence occurs
across a range of AIT media
Avolio, Kahai, Dodge, 2001
Each of the theories presented in the table is outlined in detail
in each of the paragraphs below.
The “Great Man” theory is most commonly identified as the
original leadership theory and held sway up to the mid-20th
century (Cawthon, 1996). The core fundamental idea in this
theory is that leaders are born, not made (Callan, 2003). Though
left a little on the sidelines today, it is still one of the theories
that most captures our imagination of leadership. We all can
16. give examples of great leaders. The fact that the majority of
answers would be examples that are male, mainly military or
western business leaders – Napoleon, Henry Ford, Churchill,
Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Walt Disney - is an interesting reflection
of where the majority of leadership works sits culturally even
today. It was considered that a great man could change the fate
of something, even on a large scale, such as that of a nation
(Wrightman, 1977). Jennings (1960) adds a very important time
dimension to this theory by claiming that “the great man” had
the right traits for the right time in history, implying that the
same traits at the wrong time would not produce “the great
man.” One of the problems with this theory was that it had no
distinction between good and evil (Heller, 1997). An interesting
argument was put to me in a discussion that the fall of this
theory coincided with the end of the Second World War. At this
time government and the military had lost many leaders and
urgently needed to find or grow new ones. Thus leadership
thinkers had to open the conceptual framework to the idea that
leaders could be developed. One could argue that, looking at the
American business/political leaders of the 1920s and the high
number of women in significant positions of power, that this
change in reality began after the First World War (Drucker
2003).
The trait theory approach was the first significant move away
from the Great Man theory. It rose out of the study of the
leadership characteristics or traits which differentiate leaders
from others. Essentially it aimed to develop the list of key
characteristics or traits which could be used to define successful
leaders. Despite lengthy and numerous amounts of academic
research, no one set of traits has ever been agreed upon and the
research has been rather inconclusive (Bohlen, 2003; Mullins,
1999). Stodgill’s listing of key leadership traits and skills
(Stodgill, 1974), often seen as the foundation of this research
line, still holds true today. Many of these traits still emerge in
current leadership writings and can still be found in the
17. majority of the recruitment criteria used today. However traits
are difficult to agree upon and researchers on leadership often
ended up with long lists which contained a high degree of
subjectivity (Mullins, 1999). Leadership theorists were forced
to look elsewhere, directed in a way by Stodgill himself who
suggested that trait study should be integrated with situational
demands (House, Aditya, 1997).
Behavioral leadership theories developed out of dissatisfaction
with the trait approach and moved away from trait theory in that
they considered that leaders are made and not born. These
theories put forward the idea that leadership can be defined into
certain behaviors that can be learned and developed (Bandura,
1982; Skinner, 1967). The behavioural theorists were the first to
clearly put forward a case for the fact that leadership can be
learned and that it did not rely on any inherent talent. This
theoretical approach became the springboard for the numerous
studies, which we continue to see today, about what leaders
actually do (Kotter, 1990). Out of this research came the
identification of two broad classifications of leadership
behaviors – task and person oriented behaviors (House, Aditya,
1997). The assumption of this theory, that there were
universally accepted and effective leadership behaviors, has
caused its acceptability to decline due to the lack of
consideration given to context.
The situational or contingency theories focused on the need to
look at context and claimed that effective leadership is
contingent on the situation (Callan, 2003). The idea that
different leadership behaviors or skills are needed in different
contexts today seems rather common sense, but Fiedler’s work
in the 1960s broke new ground. Fielder put forward that there is
no one best way to lead, and that the choice of leadership skill
set, behavior and style would be contingent on the situation
(Fiedler, 1969). Essentially it considers that performance is
contingent on the interaction of the style of leader and
18. favorability of the situation for the leader (Mitchell et al 1970).
Fielder defined three key aspects – leader-member relations,
task structure and power – which would condition leadership
choice of skill and style (Fielder, 1969). This theory believes
that the “type of leadership behavior that will be most effective
is contingent on the favorableness of the task situation” (Sadler,
2003:77). A particular form of contingency theory, known as
situational, focused on the point that leadership style is a
function of the situation (Hersey, Blanchard, 1988).
The path-goal theory of leadership attempted to address the
mixed results of leadership research in the 1960s that showed an
unclear relationship between structure and the satisfaction of
followers (House, 1971). It clarified the relationship between
structure, performance and job satisfaction and the context of
the type of work carried out (routine versus non-routine tasks
and satisfying versus non-satisfying tasks). Path-goal theory
argues that the leadership style used is altered depending on the
followers’ need of clarity about what the goals/expectations are,
or how to get to them (the path). Thus leadership becomes a
calculation of style appropriate to achieving the goal along a
defined path (Plowman et al, 2007). Essentially it advanced the
work of the situational/contingency theorists by developing the
practical application of a leadership approach to goal
achievement.
Individuals who exercise charismatic leadership can be defined
as leaders who, “by force of their personalities, are capable of
having profound and extraordinary effects on followers”
(House, Baetz, 1979:399). It is a theory of leadership that has
gained much public admiration. Followers are attracted to
charismatic leaders, and this theory typically characterises
leadership as a role that is granted by devoted followers rather
than a given position. In essence, “charismatic leaders differ
from other leaders by their ability to formulate and articulate an
inspirational vision and by behaviours and actions that foster an
19. impression that they and their mission are extraordinary”
(Conger et al, 1997:291). Charismatic leadership is said to have
three core aspects – envisioning, empathy and empowerment
(Choi, 2006). Charismatic leadership is in fact value-neutral,
i.e. it makes no distinction between good or bad, ethical or
immoral leadership (Howell, Avolio, 1992). A truly charismatic
leader can lead followers to war (Hitler), heroic self-sacrifice
(Jeanne d’Arc), cult beliefs (Jim Jones), peace (Mandela,
Gandhi), or service (Mother Teresa). It is the ethical use of
their power and the aspect of service (i.e. the wish to contribute
to the welfare of others) that marks the outcome difference of a
“good” charismatic leader. Research has shown that while
charismatic leadership is clear in the leader-follower
relationship at an individual level, it is less clear at the leader-
group relational level (Seltzer, Bass, 1990). Charismatic
leadership is a much discussed aspect of leadership; however,
its elusive nature has meant that its study is conspicuously
absent from research data (Conger, Kanungo, 1987).
Transactional leadership theory deals with the role of “reward”
(e.g. pay, promotion, etc,) as a motive for achieving results and
“punishment” (e.g. loss of salary, demotion, loss of position) as
a motive to ensure adherence to the goal to be achieved. The
transactional leader is a leader whose actions take place within
the existing organizational system or culture and who makes no
effort to change that system (Waldman et al, 2001). They
recognize the actions their subordinates must take in order to
achieve outcomes (Bass, 1985) and develop agreements with
them which make clear what they will receive if they do
something right and what will happen is they do something
wrong (Bass, Avolio, 1993). By default, this approach acts to
strengthen the existing structures and culture within an
organization. The leader’s role is to make the goal clear and to
select the appropriate rewards to ensure motivation towards that
goal (Sadler, 2003).
20. Transformational leadership inspires followers to do more than
they would have expected to accomplish (Bass, 1985). This
theory was first put forward by Burns in the 1970s and was
elaborated on by Bass in the 1980s. Since then it has gained
enormous popularity both in academic and practitioner circles
(Brown, Keeping, 2005). It can be defined as the process of
engaging commitment in a context of shared values and vision
(Sadler, 2003), or the aligning of the interests of the
organization and its members (Bass, 1999). For Burns, this
differed from charismatic leadership, which inspired and
motivated, but did not necessarily transform and change;
charismatic leadership is an inherent trait, whereas
transformational leadership is a behavior that can be learnt
(Tichy, Devanna, 1986). Transformational leadership is said to
have four components – idealized influence, individual
consideration, intellectual stimulation and inspiration (Bass,
Avolio, 1990; Avolio, et al, 1991). It is a leadership theory that
involves maximizing mutual interest and restraint in the use of
power (Sadler, 2003). Transformational leadership was, and is,
seen as leadership that broadens and elevates the interests of the
follower, and that generates awareness and motivation towards
the purpose and mission of the organization. It is a theory of
leadership that brings the group purpose above individual needs
for the attainment of a common goal (Seltzer, Bass, 1990).
Burns sees the leader-follower relationship as a two-way
transforming possibility, in which leader and follower are
transformed by the interaction.
Cognitive theory comes from the cognitive science approach,
and its contribution to leadership theory is to look at how both
leaders and followers think and process information. Leaders, it
is suggested, achieve effectiveness through the stories they
relate and embody (Gardner, 1996; Boal, Schultz, 2007). The
cognitive approach looks at how leaders think, and how their
behavior is determined as a response to the information they
receive (Wofford, 1994). Its contribution is rather recent and
21. potentially can help leadership theorists explain how leaders
and followers understand and process information and use that
to make decisions (Avolio et al, 2009). This potential is felt to
be yet explored as leadership theory per se.
The idea of servant leadership was first put forward in the
1970s by Robert Greenleaf, and it has gained a rather
impressive following. His key idea was that the leader was first
a servant. “The servant-leader is servant first…It begins with
the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to serve first. The
conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead” (Greenleaf,
2002:27). Greenleaf argued that this view lifts leadership above
the division of concepts, language and practice and allows
leaders to bring people and organizations together towards a
common goal. He proposes leadership that contains a depth of
commitment to all the stakeholders. The servant-leader shares
leadership, displays authenticity and builds a community within
the organization’s members (Washington, 2007). While
idealistic, the concept has gained increasing momentum due to
the fact that it encompasses an ethical and ecological stance that
is sustainable. It is a leadership that is aware that the end and
means are inseparable and that we live in a world of
relationships (Covey, 2002). While measurement of servant
leadership is (and will always be) problematic, it is felt that this
is a construct of leadership that has a place in the current
organizational reality (Melchar et al, 2008).
The concept of authenticity is rooted in the commonly heard
phrase “to thine own self be true” (Avolio, Gardner, 2005).
Authentic leadership is commonly agreed to encompass
balanced processing, internalized moral perspectives, relational
transparency and self-awareness (Avolio et al, 2009). It
encompasses two aspects; that of “owning one’s personality”
and of acting in accordance with that “true self” (Gardner et al,
2005:344). It arose out of a post-Enron need of responsible
leadership, i.e. the leader taking responsibility for the moral
22. obligations of the organization (Novicevic et al, 2006).
Authentic leadership is defined on the basis of a leader’s self-
concept and of the relationship between that self-concept and
their actions; authenticity is seen as an attribute, rather than a
value or a style (Shamir, Eilam, 2005). Leaders may be
authentic transformational leaders or inauthentic. Authenticity
is proposed as a root construct of leadership (i.e. a construct
that is not confined to a particular leadership style), although
further research is needed to see whether it is a basis of good
leadership regardless of participative, directive or inspirational
leadership styles (Avolio et al, 2009). While important, the
discussion on authentic leadership still lacks focus on the role,
i.e. to be authentic to oneself is one thing, but that alone is not
enough; a leader must also authentically fill a role.
Proponents of complexity leadership theory put forward the idea
that in the reality of today’s organizational contexts, leadership
theory must evolve in order to take into account complex
adaptive environments (Marion, Ulh-Bien, 2001; Lichtenstein et
al, 2006). Its proponents argue that much of the above
leadership theory is based on top-down, bureaucratic paradigms
(Uhl-Bien et al, 2007) and this is not effective in the current
context of knowledge systems. “Complexity examines the
clustering of ideas and people and what happens when these
clusters interact” (Marion et al, 2005:617). Complexity
leadership theory views leadership as an interactive dynamic
system, of unpredictable agents that interact with each other in
complex feedback networks which produce adaptive outcomes
(Uhl-Bien et al, 2007). With this theory the unit of analysis is
not the leader but the situation in which the leader operates; the
relationships are not defined by their hierarchical position, but
rather by their interactions at all levels. It attempts to address
the issue of leadership theory needing to be “embedded in
complex interplay of numerous interacting forces” (Uhl-Bien et
al, 2007:302). The framework for complexity leadership theory
is made up of three leadership roles which are entangled (i.e.
23. constantly interacting together). These are (Uhl-Bien et al,
2007):
· administrative leadership – the actions which take place in
formal managerial roles and that plan and coordinate the
organisations activities
· adaptive leadership – the interactive dynamic that emerges
from the relationships in a context and which produce adaptive
outcomes
· enabling leadership – actions which foster and enable new
adaptive outcomes to emerge
The appropriateness of this approach to leadership is reflected
by the numerous research articles published dedicated to the
subject. Its proponents argue that its call for a deeper
understanding of leadership and the context within which it
takes place is a necessary basis in order for leadership to
advance (Osborn, Hunt, 2007).
Cross-Cultural leadership theory has not been adequately
defined as a leadership theory. There is a definition offered by
House et al (1997) asserting that expected, accepted and
effective leadership behavior varies according to the culture
within which it takes place. They put forward the idea that
effective leadership is contingent on culturally endorsed
implicit theories of leadership (House, Aditya, 1997). While
this could be a theory of leadership, it remains rather focused
on national culture rather than being truly cross-cultural. That
culture is a key moderator of context is widely accepted
(Walumba et al, 2007). Many studies have focused on
leadership styles in, and across, cultures (Joynt, Warner 1996;
Graen, 2006; Project GLOBE, House et al, 2004), again mainly
in relation to national cultures. In fact, it is often the case that
researchers are simply applying a cultural lens to extant
24. leadership theories (Dickson et al, 2003) driven by the need to
understand what kind of leadership is effective in different
cultures. This has limited the study to equate “culture” to
“national identity” (Holmbery, Akerblom, 2006), and much of
the reference ground-work goes back to that of Hofstede (1991),
which, while seminal, remains much criticized for its for its
overly simplistic dimensional conceptualization of culture
(Dickson et al, 2003). It is well documented that leaders must
face the increasing challenges of managing diverse workforces
created by today’s globalized environments, which increasingly
finds globalized workforces within single organizational
structures (Chrobot-Mason et al, 2007). There is an increasing
need to develop this aspect of the study of leadership in
multicultural contexts that are often the reality of today’s
organizations. Avolio et al (2009:438) even identify the concept
of “global leadership” as the term incorporating an increasing
research field aimed at identifying leadership that is effective
across a variety of cultures, i.e. a true cross-cultural leadership
theory.
E-leadership is a term that has grown out of the changing nature
of the workplace and the increasing presence of Advanced
Information Technology (AIT) as a determining factor of the
working environment. It focuses research on leadership taking
place in high technology environments, technologies that help
leaders to monitor, plan, take decisions, share and control
information; E-leadership is defined as “the social influence
process mediated by AIT to produce a change in attitudes,
feelings, thinking, behavior and or performance with
individuals, groups and/or organizations” (Avolio et al,
2000:616). Context here is a key construct, as technology is
both a cause and consequence of the structures in organizations
(Weick, 1990). E-leadership is defined by this new AIT context;
it can be enabled or completely undermined by the AIT
introduced (Avolio et al, 2000). The question remains – is it a
leadership theory or is it a contextual influence on how
25. leadership takes place? The increasing number of examples
where interactions are mediated by technology would imply that
these situations require a specific leadership theory, as all the
models mentioned so far implicitly imply face-to-face
interactions.
Other leadership theories
Naturally, there are more than the fourteen theories of
leadership. In terms of academically accepted theories, and ones
that have a substantive research basis, there are a number of
other theories that have not been included in Table 1.
· New-genre leadership can be defined as a mix of charismatic
and transformational leadership theory, with a focus on leader
behavior, visioning, inspiring, ideological and moral values. It
looks at leadership “emphasising charismatic leader behaviors,
inspiring, ideological and moral value, as well as
transformational leadership” (Avolio et al, 2009:428). It is a
rather wide mixture of transformational and charismatic
leadership theories in a context-bound condition. This mix is
felt to offer more complexity, rather than simplicity, to
leadership research.
· Leader-member Exchange (LMX) - In LMX theory, leaders
develop different exchange relationships with followers, and the
quality of these relationships influences the outcome (Graen
1976, Graen, Uhl-Bien, 1995). It sees that the relationship
between the leader and follower holds the key to the quality of
the outcome of the leadership act; the more effective the
relationship or exchange, the more effective the result. The
literature has focused exclusively on the consequences of LMX
relationships (Avolio et al, 2009). While it is one of the few
theories of leadership focused on leader-follower relationships,
it is transactional in nature. The research into LMX generally
has taken place in a closed social system (Gehani, 2002), while
leadership frequently takes place in an open system. LMX has
demonstrated the benefits of high quality leader-member
relations, but some would argue that there is still relatively
26. little understood about what happens within those relationships
(Uhl-Bien, Maslyn, 2000). These aspects are seen to limit its
practical use. LMX is felt rather to be a view of leadership that
emphasizes leader-member relations and their quality (Atwater,
Carmeli, 2009), rather than a leadership theory per se. This is
clearly shown in the work of Henderson et al (2009), who take
various leadership theories and apply them to the LMX model to
show how different theories result in different leader-member
relationships, which would seem to imply that it is not a
leadership theory, but rather a way of modelling leader-follower
relationships. LMX research, while significant, has been rather
modest in resulting correlations between leader and member
reports and their implications for outcome of LMX (Cogliser et
al, 2009). Some would even go as far to say that there is a
construct validity problem with the results from LMX studies
(Schriesheim, Cogliser, 2009).
· Shared leadership theory – a leadership theory where the
members collectively share the leadership role. While writers as
early as Follett (1924) have advocated for shared leadership,
there is still little agreement on its definition (Avolio et al,
2009).
· Spiritual leadership theory can be defined as “comprising the
values, attitudes, and behaviors that are necessary to
intrinsically motivate one’s self and others so that they have a
sense of spiritual survival through calling and membership”
(Fry 2003:694). Fry bases his concept on a definition of
leadership as a motivation to change. Zohar even takes the idea
one step further to promote the idea of spiritually intelligent
leadership defined as the “power a leader can unleash in
individuals or organizations by evoking people’s deepest
meanings, values and purposes” (Zohar, 2005:46). Research has
shown that there is considerable overlap between leadership
values and those espoused by spiritual teachings (Reave, 2005).
Some would argue that this paradigm adds a missing piece to
the leadership literature, that of a sense of calling or service
27. (Avolio et al, 2009) linking to something deeper than material
returns. On the other hand, this leadership theory, by default,
brings the leader into a central role in an individual’s life
wherein their practice of spiritual growth is directly influenced
by the leader. Poole (2009) sees the organizational competitive
advantages that the focus on spirituality in the workplace would
bring (higher commitment, motivation, engagement,
performance), but one is left wondering as to whether this is
really spirituality or just effective leadership practice. The
question is still open as to whether this is another “fad that runs
its course” (Dent et al, 2005:647).
The four theories discussed here have been excluded from Table
1 for one of three reasons - (1) their addition to the literature is
partial and covered in other theories, (2) their theory basis is as
yet unclear in terms of applicability to leadership, or further
research is still needed to clarify their definition, (3) they are a
mix of other theories that have already been taken into account
separately.
Summarizing Leadership Theory
Fourteen leadership theories are listed in Table 1, representing
the range of leadership theories found, and widely accepted, in
academia. The additional four theories mentioned in section 1.2
have an academic research basis (some rather considerable), and
yet are theories that are not fully accepted. Together these
theories represent the wide variety of views on leadership. All
have been substantiated by considerable research.
The subject of leadership skills has also received much attention
in the leadership literature. Mumford et al (2007) describe the
various conceptualizations of leadership skills in terms of
cognitive, interpersonal, business and strategic. Typically, the
cognitive skills are linked to the underlying information
processing that occur within the individual (Lord, Hall, 2005);
interpersonal skills are those linked to the interaction with
28. others. The aspect of leadership skills will not be further
developed in this thesis. Leadership theories, by their nature,
imply the use of specific skills and these are defined by the
theory, context and nature of the leadership being applied. Thus
they are not considered to be an underlying fundamental of
leadership. The same logic has been applied to the subject of
leadership styles. Style is personal, and can be culturally
orientated (Sadler, Hofstede, 1976) and, like values, is unique
to an individual (Nahavandi, 2006). Style is a way of putting
good leadership into practice and not considered as an
underlying fundamental.
Ph.D.:The power of a Lollipop: from theory to action
May, Feena. 2010-2011
Head of Learning and Development
International Committee of the Red Cross
Open Source
Adapted/abridged/edited
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