Lesson 2: The Theories of Leadership

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright ©2011 Pearson Education
Advertisements

Learning Outcomes Define leadership, power and authority
Leadership Theories Andrea Reger.
Leadership Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 10/e Chapter 11
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Leading with Influence Chapter 13 Copyright © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2005 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning All rights reserved 1 Chapter 15 Dynamics Of Leadership.
Leadership Ability to influence a group toward the achievement of goals I) Trait Theories II) Behavioral Theories III) Contingency Theories.
Microsoft® PowerPoint Presentation to Accompany
11 Chapter Leadership and Trust Copyright ©2011 Pearson Education.
LEADERSHIP.
Lesson 2: The Theories of Leadership “A leader takes people where they want to go. A great leader takes people where they don’t necessarily want to go,
Characteristics of a Good Leader  Groups of 4 people  No Talking – Just Writing  You will have 4 minutes to do this activity.
Theories of Leadership Trait Personal-Behavioral Situational Transformational.
CHAPTER 12 Leadership Introduction to Industrial/Organizational Psychology by Ronald E. Riggio.
Providing Effective Leadership
Leadership &Trust . 1.
Fundamentals of Organizational Communication
Leadership Chapter 9 Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 9/e
8 th edition Steven P. Robbins Mary Coulter. Page 278Slide 2 Managers Versus Leaders Managers  Are appointed (assigned) to their position.  Can influence.
Leadership in an Organizational Context Chapter 16: Organizational Behavior 261 Gabrielle Durepos.
11 Chapter Leadership and Trust Copyright ©2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
Leadership. Leadership andManagement Langton, Robbins and Judge, Organizational Behaviour, Fifth Cdn. Ed. Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education Canada.
Leadership.
18-1 King Faisal University School of Business Course: Business 1 Lecturer: Asma Alkroud Chapter 7: Leadership.
WEEK 3.
Leadership: What Makes an Effective Leader?
Leadership n What is leadership n What makes a manager a successful/effective leader n Leadership issues u Leading clinical professionals.
Leadership Managers Vs Leaders:  Managers are appointed to their positions. Their ability to influence is based on the formal authority inherent in that.
TASNUVA CHAUDHURY (TCY) CHAPTER 12: LEADERSHIP MGT 321: Organizational Behavior.
HSA 171 CAR. 1436/6/20-14  Transactional and Transformational Leadership.  Leadership Theories 3.
Lesson 2: The Theories of Leadership
11-1 Leadership 06 May 2013 Chapter 11 Essentials of Organizational Behavior, 10/e Stephen P. Robbins/Timothy A. Judge.
Leadership. Leadership: final exam take-home question What is your theory, model, philosophy of leadership? Tell your story: how did you form your view.
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR S T E P H E N P. R O B B I N S E L E V E N T H E D I T I O N W W W. P R E N H A L L. C O M / R O B B I N S © 2005 Prentice Hall.
Leadership “I am more afraid of an army of 100 sheep led by a lion than an army of 100 lions led by a sheep.” (Talleyrand)
Chapter 9 Leadership Managers versus leaders Trait theories of leadership Behavioral theories of leadership Contingency theories of leadership Contemporary.
The path-goal model Leadership behavioral styles Follower goals
Chapter Objectives After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
LEADERSHIP THEORIES.
Behavioral Theories of Leadership
Leadership.
MANAGEMENT RICHARD L. DAFT.
Lesson 2: The Theories of Leadership
Chapter 12: Leaders and Leadership
Chapter 14 Leadership MGMT7 © 2014 Cengage Learning.
Leaders and Leadership
Leadership Traits & Evolution of Leadership Theories
Quiz 1.
HND – 8. Leadership Lim Sei cK.
Chapter 14 - Leadership Copyright ©2017 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible.
Who Are Leaders and What Is Leadership
The Theories of Leadership
LEADERSHIP By Devpriya Dey.
CHAPTER 13 Leadership Introduction to Industrial/Organizational Psychology by Ronald E. Riggio.
Lesson 2: The Theories of Leadership
Define leader and leadership
BBPP1103 : MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
Chapter 7 LEADERSHIP. Chapter 7 LEADERSHIP INTRODUCTION Leadership entails developing a vision for the unit or organization or group led, managing.
أساسيات القيادة Leadership Principles
Chapter 17 Leadership © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
Explain why the study of leadership is so complicated and identify some of the various debates about the study of leadership Describe the different theories.
o r g a n i z a t i o n a l b e h a v i o r
Leadership & Management
Leadership Chapter 12 McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 12 Leadership and Followership
Lesson 2: The Theories of Leadership
Leadership Quiz Chapters 1-4.
Leadership Chapter Twelve.
Leadership Chapter Twelve.
Presentation transcript:

Lesson 2: The Theories of Leadership “A leader takes people where they want to go. A great leader takes people where they don’t necessarily want to go, but ought to be.” -Rosalynn Carter Lesson 2: The Theories of Leadership

1. What is the evolutionary process of leadership theories? Great man theories were the first attempt in studying leadership. -Based on the idea that leaders are “born.” Additional approaches have been developed— trait theories, behavioral theories, and modern-day contingency theories. Emphasis today is that leadership styles should match the situation at hand, which is a contingency approach.

2. What are the major conclusions of the trait theories? First major study searched for traits that differentiated leaders from followers. Researched focused heavily on personality characteristics. Stogdill/Mann identified five important traits found more in leaders than followers. Intelligence, self-confidence, determination, integrity, and sociability. Intelligence most important. Leadership skills can be developed and nurtured. Organizations need to spend time and resources in training leaders to acquire certain desirable traits.

3. What is the skills approach to leadership? Robert Katz’s research surfaced a set of skills for leadership success. Skill 1-“Technical skills” involving hands-on activity. Skill 2 -“Human skills” which is the ability to work with people. -Greatest asset to have. Skill 3 -“Conceptual skills” having ability to work with ideas and concepts.

4. What are the major conclusions of the behavioral Theories? The 1940s saw that leadership effectiveness was dependent upon leader behavior. Rensis Likert’s Michigan Studies surfaced two forms of leader behavior—job-centered (production) and employee-centered. -Attempt made to balance task and relationship emphasis. University of Michigan Studies Identified 2 Leadership Behaviors Employee-Centered Production-Centered Leaders interested in their subordinates as people, encourage worker participation in the organizational goal-setting process. Leaders emphasized technical aspects of job, set job standards, close supervision of subordinates.

4. Behavioral Theories continued Ohio State Studies also revealed two leadership forms. -Used questionnaire to assess employee perceptions of leaders. -Consideration behavior (concern for feelings). -Initiating structure (defining roles).

4. Behavioral Theories continued Managerial/Leadership Grid developed by Blake & Mouton. -Two dimensions similar to Michigan/Ohio State Studies. -Concern for subordinates and concern for production/results. -9.9 is the ideal team approach on grid-balance of task and relationship. -This research influenced modern contingency approaches of today. Wren p. 147

5. What are the major components of the Contingency Theories? Contingency theory identifies: -Key situational factors, -Specifies how they interact, and -Determines best leadership approach. -This is called situational leadership.

5. Contingency Theories continued Situational leadership is built upon the contingency theory, and refined by Ken Blanchard in the 1980s. Leadership is composed of both a directive and supportive dimension. Coaching and delegating were added to provide four styles.

5. Contingency Theories continued Path-Goal Theory developed by Evans & House. -Adapting leadership to the situation. -Leader can impact performance of others by offering paths to desired goals. -Rewards contingent on increased performance.

5. Contingency Theories continued Four leader behaviors: -Directive: gives specific guidance and direction. -Supportive: provides assistance. -Participative: hand-in-hand with subordinates. -Achievement Oriented: sets challenging goals and has high expectations. Best style to use is to adapt to the participative leadership style.

6. Differentiate Between Transactional and Transformational. Two emerging leadership perspectives: -Transactional which focuses on leader and follower relationships. -Transformational (called charismatic) focuses on creating vision, purpose, or mission.

6. Differentiate Between Transactional and Transformational. Transactional leadership places emphasis on managerial theories (Social-Exchange) -Keys are role of leader, group, and performance. -Reward and punishment system. -Build healthy relationships.

6. Differentiate Between Transactional and Transformational. Transformational leadership motivates followers to: -do more than is expected. -see raised value in tasks. -put group’s common cause in front of individual needs.