Term
|
Definition
Key Text:
Thomas Carlyle (1847) On Heroes and Hero Worship |
|
|
Term
Chapters in On Heroes and Hero Worship
Thomas Carlyle (1847)
Great Man Theory |
|
Definition
Series of Lectures
1. Hero as DIVINITY (Oden)
2. Hero as PROPHET (Muhammad)
3. Hero as POET (Dante, Shakespeare)
4. Hero as PRIEST (Luther and Knox)
5. Hero as MAN OF LETTERS (Johnson, Rousseau, Burns)
6. Hero as KING (Cromwell, Napoleon) |
|
|
Term
Summary of Great Man Theory from Thomas Carlyle (1847) |
|
Definition
Leaders are born, not made - only varied by situations in which divinely placed.
"Find in any country the Ablest Man that exists there; raise him to the supreme place, and loyally reverence him: you have perfect government for that country; no ballet-box, parliamentary eloquence, voting, constitution building, or other machinery whatsoever can improve it a whit." |
|
|
Term
Critiques of Great Man Theory |
|
Definition
Spencer (1884): times produce the man and not the reverse (1884) - situationalist
Leo Tolstory, War and Peace: events shape themsleves; great men take advantage - perhaps changing them, but not shaping them.
Heiffetz (1994): Values this history maker, placing Gandhi and Hitler in the same category |
|
|
Term
Trait Theory
Key Theorist |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
One of the earliest approaches.
Hundreds of studies in the 1930's and 40's
Emphasizes leader's attributes (personality, motive, value, skills)
|
|
|
Term
Trait Theory
Underlying Assumption |
|
Definition
Some people are "natural leaders" endowed with special traits. |
|
|
Term
Trait Theory
Big Five Personality Traits |
|
Definition
OCEAN
Openness
Concientiousness
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Neuroticism |
|
|
Term
Trait Theory
Modern Examples |
|
Definition
Gardner (1989)
Bass and Stogdill (per Ciulla) |
|
|
Term
Trait Approach
Criticisms |
|
Definition
Ignored intervening variables and explanatory processes
Assumes stability of traits
Those who possess traits yet don't lead?
No single trait appears to guarantee leadership
Heiffetz (1994): Would select the same men to study as the Great Man Theory
Basically draws on every positive personality trait (not a genuine category?)
Ciulla: Concern for ethics?
|
|
|
Term
Behavioral Theory
Theorists and Dates
|
|
Definition
Ohio State and Michigian Studies (1950's)
Mann (1965)
MacGregor (1960)
Blake and Mouton (1964) |
|
|
Term
Behavioral Theory
Conceptual Summary |
|
Definition
Rejects Great Man and closer to Trait Theory
Two categories of what managers acutally do: (1) How they spend time. (2) Identifying effective leadership behavior |
|
|
Term
Behavioral Theory
Ohio State Studies |
|
Definition
Task vs. Relationships
Consideration vs. Structure |
|
|
Term
Behavioral Theory
Mann (1965) |
|
Definition
Leadership effectiveness should be measured by what leaders actually do |
|
|
Term
Behavioral Theory
MacGregor (1960) |
|
Definition
Theory X vs. Theory Y
Theory X = followers cannot achieve their own goals and require exercised authority
Theory Y = Followers can achieve their own goals best by self direction
|
|
|
Term
Behavioral Theory
Blake and Mouton (1964) |
|
Definition
Managerial Grid based on initiating structure and consideration.
Ideal = high task, high relationship
Measured production (1-9) on horizontal scale and People (1-9) on verticle scale
Attracted attention of managers
|
|
|
Term
Behavioral Theory
Blake and Mouton (1964)
5 Basic Styles of Leadership |
|
Definition
Impoverished,
Task,
Middle of the Road,
Country Club,
Team
|
|
|
Term
Behavioral Theory
Comments |
|
Definition
Opens leadership to anyone willing to use appropriate behavior.
Works well with descriptive studies
Note awareness of relationships - growing awareness of importance of the follower
Gary Yukl (2006): The value orientation here is correct - task and people |
|
|
Term
Situational Leadership
Key Theorists
|
|
Definition
Hersey and Blanchard (1977) |
|
|
Term
Situational Leadership
Conceptual Summary |
|
Definition
Like behavioral theory with emphasis on task and relationship
New emphasis on setting
|
|
|
Term
Situational Leadership
Hersey and Blanchard (1977) |
|
Definition
Specifies the appropirate type of leader behavior for different levels of subordinate maturity.
Matrix based on ability (task) and motivation/confidence (relationship) |
|
|
Term
Hersey and Blanchard (1977)
Four Quadrants |
|
Definition
Delegating (rT)
Participating (Rt)
Selling (RT)
Telling (rT) |
|
|
Term
Situational Leadership
Critiques |
|
Definition
Hersey and Blanchard seem more about management than leadership.
Bolman and Deal: Even with high structure, would an unmotivated and unskilled worker improve?
|
|
|
Term
Situational Leadership
Similiarity to Machiavelli |
|
Definition
"Sometimes one must be a fox, other times a lion" |
|
|
Term
Contingency Leadership
Key Theorists |
|
Definition
Fielder (1964)
House (1971)
Vroom and Yetton (1973) |
|
|
Term
Contingency Leadership
Conceptual Summary |
|
Definition
contingency theory describes aspects of leadership that apply to some situations and not to others.
Context mediates approach
REPRESENTS A GROWING AWARENESS OF COMPLEXITY |
|
|
Term
Contingency Leadership
Fielder (1964) |
|
Definition
Least Preferred Coworker
Measured LPC to determine task or relationship orientation |
|
|
Term
Contingency leadership
House (1971) |
|
Definition
Path-Goal Theory
offering rewards for performance and clarifying goals for this path |
|
|
Term
Contingency Leadership
Three styles of Path-Goal Theory (House, 1971) |
|
Definition
Directive
Supportive
Participative |
|
|
Term
Contingency Leadership
Vroom & Yetton (1973) |
|
Definition
Normative Decision Making Model
|
|
|
Term
Contingency Leadership
3 types of Normative Decision Making (Vroom and Yetton, 1973) |
|
Definition
Autocratic
Consultative
Group-Oriented
NOTE GROWING ROLE OF FOLLOWERS |
|
|
Term
Contingency Leadership
Critiques |
|
Definition
House 1971 Path-Goal theory very transactional
No single variable accounts for leader effectiveness
Heiffetz, 1994: mark of leadership is still about control |
|
|
Term
NeoCharismatic Leadership
Conceptual Summary |
|
Definition
House and Aditya (1997)
Comprised of CHARISMATIC LEADERSHIP (House, 1977)
VISIONARY THEOIES (Bennis and Nanus, 1985)
TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERSHIP (Bass, 1985)
|
|
|
Term
NeoCharismatic Leadership
Key Theorists |
|
Definition
Webber, 1947
House, 1977
Burns, 1978
Bass, 1985 |
|
|
Term
Charismatic Leadership
Webber 1947 |
|
Definition
Charisma = divine giftedness |
|
|
Term
Charismatic Leadership
Yukl (2002) |
|
Definition
Charismatic Leaderhip arises when people in a situation needing a savior |
|
|
Term
Neocharismatic Leadership
Visionary Theories (Bennis and Nanus 1985) |
|
Definition
Visionary
Confidence in and Respect for Followers
Behaving Exceptionally |
|
|
Term
Charismatic Leadership
Conceptual Summary
|
|
Definition
Often born out of crisis
offers solutions to crisis and appears capable of implementing the solution
Key: Force of personality and attribution of followers |
|
|
Term
NeoCharismatic Leadership
Collective Emphasis |
|
Definition
Being visionary
energetic
innovative
unconventional
empowering
exemplary
inspiring followers |
|
|
Term
Charismatic Leadership
5 Behaviors (House, 1977) |
|
Definition
Goal Articulation
Role Modeling
Image Modeing
High Expectations
Confidence in Followers |
|
|
Term
NeoCharismatic Leadership
Bass (1985) Full Range Leadership |
|
Definition
Laissez Faire
Transactional Leadership
Transformational Leadership |
|
|
Term
NeoCharismatic Leadership
Bass (1985)
Transactional Leadership Factors |
|
Definition
Contingent Reward
Passive Management by Exception
Active Management by Exception |
|
|
Term
NeoCharismatic Leadership
Bass 1985
Transformational Leadership Factors |
|
Definition
Inspirational Motivation
Idealized Influence Intellectual Stimulation
Individualized Consideration
(Neumonic = MISC) |
|
|
Term
NeoCharismatic Theory
Critiques |
|
Definition
Heiffetz (1994): Transactional studies do not evaluate purpose or ends
Yukl (1999) called for more distinction betwen Charismatic and Transformational Leadership |
|
|
Term
Servant Leadership
Key Theorists |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Servant Leadership
Conceptual Summary |
|
Definition
Begins with a desire to serve first and lead second
Influeced by Hesse's Journey to the East |
|
|
Term
Servant Leadership
Best Test |
|
Definition
Do those served grow as persons?
Become healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous?
More likely to become servants?
Effect on the least privilidged? |
|
|
Term
Servant Leadership and Transformational Leadership
Comparison |
|
Definition
Smith, Montagno, Kuzmenko (2004)
Both emphasize personal development, empowerment of followers, facilitate achievement of followers |
|
|
Term
Servant Leadership and Transformational Leadership
Contrasts
|
|
Definition
TF aligns followers interests
SL puts follower interests first |
|
|
Term
Servant Leadership and Transformational Leadership
Best Context |
|
Definition
SL for stable environments
TF for more dynamic environments |
|
|
Term
Leadership Inventories
3 Main Ones |
|
Definition
Leadership Practices Inventory (LPI)
Global Executive Leadership Inventory (GELI)
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) |
|
|
Term
Leadership Inventories
Leadership Practices Inventory
Authors |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|