Write a brief summary of the important concepts you learned from chapter 2 & 3. (Chapter 2 & 3 summary attached and textbook attached) - Management
Write a brief summary of the important concepts you learned from chapter 2 & 3. (Chapter 2 & 3 summary attached and textbook attached)
Writing Requirements
Include Abstract
APA format
Only 2 pages in length (excluding cover page, abstract, and reference list)
Only reference to textbook
2-1Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
2-2
Leader Development
“Leadership and learning are indispensable
to each other.”
~John F. Kennedy
C
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a
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r
2
2-3
The Action-Observation-Reflection
Model
• Making the most of experience is key to
developing one’s leadership ability.
• The action-observation-reflection (A-O-R)
model shows that leadership development
is enhanced when the experience involves
three different processes:
– Action
– Observation
– Reflection
• Spiral of experience: Colin Powell’s
example.
2-4
The Spiral of Experience
2-5
The Key Role of Perception in the
Spiral of Experience
• Experience is not just a matter of what events
happen to you; it also depends on how you
perceive those events.
• Perception affects all three phases of the
action-observation-reflection model.
• People actively shape and construct their
experiences.
2-6
Perception and Observation
• Observation and perception both deal with
attending to events around us.
– We are selective in what we attend to and what we, in
turn, perceive.
• Perceptual sets can influence any of our
senses:
– They are the tendency or bias to perceive one thing
and not another.
– Feelings, needs, prior experiences, and expectations
can all trigger a perceptual set.
• Stereotypes represent powerful impediments to
learning.
– Awareness of biases occurs upon reflection.
2-7
Perception and Reflection
• Reflection deals with how we interpret our
observations.
• Perception is inherently an interpretive, or a
meaning-making, activity.
• Attributions are the explanations we develop
for the behaviors or actions we attend to.
• Fundamental attribution error is the tendency
to overestimate the dispositional causes of
behavior and underestimate the environmental
causes when others fail.
2-8
Perception and Reflection (cont.)
• A self-serving bias is the tendency to make
external attributions for one’s own failures, yet
make internal attributions for one’s successes.
• The actor/observer difference refers to the
fact that people who are observing an action
are much more likely than the actor to make the
fundamental attribution error.
• Reflection involves higher functions like
evaluation and judgment, not just perception
and attribution.
2-9
Perception and Action
• Research shows that perceptions and biases
affect supervisors’ actions towards poorly
performing subordinates.
• The self-fulfilling prophecy occurs when our
expectations/predictions play a causal role in
bringing about the events we predict.
• Studies show that having expectations about
others can subtly influence our actions, and
these actions can, in turn, affect the way others
behave.
2-10
The Role of Expectations in Social
Interaction
2-11
Reflection and Leadership
Development
• Reflection offers leaders insights about framing
problems differently, viewing situations from
multiple perspectives, and understanding
subordinates better.
• Leaders tend to ignore reflection due to a lack
of time or a lack of awareness of its value.
• Intentional reflection may prompt leaders to
see potential benefits in experience not initially
considered relevant.
2-12
Single- and Double-Loop Learning
• Single-loop learners seek relatively little
feedback that may significantly confront their
fundamental ideas or actions.
– Individuals learn only about subjects within the “comfort
zone” of their belief systems.
• Double-loop learning involves being willing to
confront one’s own views and inviting others to
do the same.
– Mastering double-loop learning can be thought of as
learning how to learn.
– Learning is enhanced with after event reviews (AERs).
2-13
Making the Most of Your Leadership
Experiences: Learning to Learn
from Experience
• The learning events and developmental
experiences that punctuate one’s life are
usually stressful.
• Being able to go against the grain of one’s
personal historical success requires a strong
commitment to learning and a willingness to let
go of the fear of failure.
• To be successful, learning must continue
throughout life and beyond the completion of
one’s formal education.
2-14
Leader Development in College
• The number of college-level leadership studies
programs is rising, but few programs offer
academic credit, such as academic minors.
• Leadership programs should be
multidisciplinary and should cultivate values
through service learning.
• Program elements might involve individualized
feedback to students.
• Case studies, role playing, simulations, and
games provide opportunities for self-discovery
and practice.
2-15
Leader Development in
Organizational Settings
• Organization-based leadership programs
benefit both the individual and the organization.
• The return on investment (ROI) for
investments in leadership development are both
positive and substantial.
• Most programs are aimed at leaders and
supervisors in industry and public service.
• Program content depends on the organization
level of participants:
– First-level supervisors
– Mid-level managers
2-16
Leader Development in
Organizational Settings (cont.)
• Programs for first-level supervisors use
lectures, case studies, and role-playing
exercises to improve supervisory skills:
– Training
– Monitoring,
– Giving feedback
– Completing performance reviews
2-17
Leader Development in
Organizational Settings (cont.)
• Mid-level manager programs use individualized
feedback, case studies, presentations, role
playing, simulations, and in-basket exercises to
improve the following:
– Interpersonal skills
– Oral and written communication skills
– Time management skills
– Planning
– Goal setting
2-18
• Conger states that a multi-tiered approach is
effective and should focus on personal growth,
skill building, feedback, and conceptual
awareness.
• Leadership development in the 21st century
must occur in more lifelike situations and
contexts.
• Leadership programs for senior executives and
CEOs focus on strategic planning, public
relations, and interpersonal skills.
Leader Development in
Organizational Settings (cont.)
2-19
Action Learning
• Traditional training programs involve
personnel taking leadership classes during work
hours.
• Such training addresses common leadership
issues, but its artificial nature makes it difficult
to transfer concepts to actual work situations.
• In contrast, action learning involves the use of
actual work issues and challenges as the
developmental activity itself.
• The philosophy of action learning is that the
best learning involves learning by doing.
2-20
Development Planning
• Development planning is a process that helps
leaders to accelerate the development of their
own leadership skills.
• To make enduring behavioral changes, leaders
must provide positive answers to five questions:
– Do leaders know which of their behaviors need to
change?
– Is the leader motivated to change these behaviors?
– Do leaders have plans in place for changing targeted
behaviors?
– Do leaders have opportunities to practice new skills?
– Are leaders held accountable for changing targeted
behaviors?
2-21
Development Planning (cont.)
• Development planning is more than a plan—it is
really a process.
• Good development plans are constantly being
revised as new skills are learned or new
opportunities to develop skills become
available.
• Development planning provides a methodology
for leaders to improve their behavior even as
they go about their daily work activities.
2-22
Coaching
• Coaching is a key leadership skill that can help
leaders improve the bench strength of the group
and retain high-quality followers.
• Coaching is the “process of equipping people
with the tools, knowledge, and opportunities
they need to develop and become more
successful.”
• There are two types of coaching: informal and
formal.
2-23
Coaching (cont.)
• Informal coaching takes place whenever a
leader helps followers to change their
behaviors.
• According to Peterson and Hicks, the best
informal coaching generally consists of five
steps:
– Forging a partnership
– Inspiring commitment
– Growing skills
– Promoting persistence
– Shaping the environment
2-24
Coaching (cont.)
• The 5-step informal coaching process can be
used to diagnose why behavioral change is not
occurring and what can be done about it.
• Informal coaching can and does occur
anywhere in the organization.
• Informal coaching is effective for both high-
performing and low-performing followers.
• Coaching increases in difficulty when it occurs
either remotely or across cultures.
2-25
Coaching (cont.)
• Formal coaching programs are designed for
the specific needs and goals of individual
executives and managers in leadership
positions.
• Such programs share common features:
– The one-on-one relationship between manager and
coach lasts from six months to more than a year.
– The process begins with an assessment of the
manager to clarify development needs.
– The coach and manager meet monthly to build skills.
– Role plays and videotape are used extensively, and
coaches provide immediate feedback.
2-26
Coaching (cont.)
• Formal coaching programs can cost more than
$100,000.
• Coaching may be more effective at changing
behavior than more traditional learning and
training approaches.
• Behavioral changes from coaching tend to be in
place one year after the termination of a
coaching program, indicating permanent
behavioral change.
• Coaching candidates tend to have multi-million
dollar budgets and thousands of subordinates.
2-27
Mentoring
• In an organization, you can gain valuable
perspectives and insights through close
association with a mentor—an experienced
person willing to take you under his/her wing.
• Mentoring is a personal relationship in which a
more experienced mentor (usually someone 2-4
levels higher in an organization) acts as a
guide, role model, and sponsor of a less
experienced protégé.
2-28
Mentoring (cont.)
• Mentors provide protégés with knowledge,
advice, challenge, counsel, and support about
career opportunities, organizational strategy
and policy, and office politics.
• Mentoring is not the same as coaching because
it may not target specific development needs
and the mentor may not even be part of the
organization.
• There are formal and informal mentoring
programs.
2-29
Mentoring (cont.)
• Informal mentoring occurs when a protégé and
mentor build a long-term relationship based on
friendship, similar interests, and mutual respect.
• Formal mentoring involves the organization
assigning a relatively inexperienced but high-
potential leader to a top executive in the firm.
• Formal mentoring is often used to accelerate
the development of female or minority protégés.
• Informal mentoring may be more effective than
formal mentoring due to longer-term
relationships and stronger emotional bonds.
2-30
Building Your Own Leadership Self-
Image
• Not everyone wants to be a leader or believes
he/she can be.
• Many people are selling themselves short.
• Keep an open mind about the importance of
leadership.
• Avoid self-defeating generalizations.
• Experiment and take a few risks with different
leadership roles.
2-31
Summary
• One way to add value to your leadership
courses and experiences is by applying the
action-observation-reflection model.
• Be aware of the role perception plays in
leadership development.
• Education and experience can contribute to
your development as a leader.
• To become a better leader, one must seek
challenges and try to make the best of any
leadership opportunity.
2020 Showcase of Speeches Outline
Thesis: Today, forensics is utilized in college debate and speaking competition in aspects such as prose, poetry, dramatic interpretation, among others.
I. Jameer Pritchard
A. Oral presentation
B. Simple dramatization
II. Andrew Jassick
A. Dramatic interpretation
B. Personal analogy
III. Nick Durham,
A. Impromptu speaking
B. Referring to the quote
IV. Jameer
A. Communication analysis
B. Importance of posters
V. Andrew
A. Poetry interpretation
B. Dramatization as a U.S. soldier
2020
Showcase of Speeches
Outline
Thesis:
Today,
forensics
is utilized in college
debate and speaking competition in aspects such as
prose, poetry, dramatic interpretation, among others.
I.
Jameer Pritchard
A.
Oral
presentation
B.
Simple
dramatization
II.
Andrew Jassick
A.
Dramatic
interpretation
B.
Personal analogy
III.
Nick Durham,
A.
Impromptu
speaking
B.
Referring
to the quote
IV.
Jameer
A.
Communication
analysis
B.
Importance
of posters
V.
Andrew
A.
Poetry
interpretation
B.
Dramatization
as a U.S. soldier
3-1Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
3-2
Skills for Developing
Yourself as a Leader
C
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a
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3
3-3
Introduction
• Your First 90 Days as a Leader
• Learning From Experience
• Building Technical Competence
• Building Effective Relationships with Superiors
• Building Effective Relationships with Peers
• Development Planning
3-4
Your First 90 Days as a Leader
Figure 3.1: New Leader Onboarding Road Map
3-5
Before You Start: Do Your
Homework
• Candidates should gather as much information
about their potential company as they can.
• Some good sources of information include Web
sites, annual reports, press releases, and
marketing literature.
• Use Facebook, LinkedIn, Plaxo, and other social
networking sites to set up informational interviews
with people inside the organization.
3-6
The First Day: You Get Only One
Chance to Make a First Impression
• New leaders have two critical tasks to accomplish
the first day on the job: meeting their new boss
and meeting their new team.
• The first meeting with the boss should happen in
the boss’s office and be about an hour long. Key
topics to discuss include:
– Identifying the team’s key objectives, metrics, and
important projects
– Understanding the boss’s view of team strengths and
weaknesses
– Working through meeting schedules and communication
styles
– Sharing plans for the day and the next several weeks
3-7
The First Two Weeks: Lay the
Foundation
• The first two weeks should be filled with meeting
with many people both inside and outside the
team.
• The key objectives for these meetings are:
– Learning as much as possible
– Developing relationships
– Determining future allies
3-8
The First Two Weeks: Lay the
Foundation (continued)
• One-on-one meetings with key team members
should provide the leader with answers to critical
questions.
– What is the team member working on?
– What are the team member’s objectives?
– Who are the “stars” a level or two down in the
organization?
– What are the people issues on the team?
– What can the team do better?
– What advice do team members have for the new leader,
and what can the new leader do to help team members?
3-9
The First Two Weeks: Lay the
Foundation (continued)
• New leaders should schedule one-on-one
meetings with all their peers to build rapport.
• During these meetings, the new leader should
discuss the following:
– Their peers’ objectives, challenges, team structure, etc.
– Their perspectives on what the new leader’s team does
well and could do better
– Their perspectives on the new leader’s team members
– How to best communicate with the boss
– How issues get raised and decisions made on their
boss’s team
3-10
The First Two Months: Strategy,
Structure, and Staffing
• During this time period, the leader is gathering
more information, determining the direction, and
finalizing the appropriate structure and staffing
for the team. Tasks to be performed include:
– Gathering benchmarking information from other
organizations
– Meeting with key external customers and suppliers
– Meeting with the former team leader, if appropriate
3-11
The Third Month: Communicate and
Drive Change
• The new leader should have developed a vision of
the future. Things to do now include:
– Articulating how the team will win
– Identifying the what, why, and how of any needed
changes
– Defining a clear set of expectations for team members
• The two major events for the third month are to:
– Meet with the entire team
– Meet off-site with direct reports (if the team is large).
3-12
Learning From Experience
• Leadership practitioners can enhance the learning
value of experiences by:
– Creating opportunities to get feedback
– Taking a “10 percent stretch”
– Learning from others
– Keeping a journal of daily leadership events
– Having a developmental plan
3-13
Building Technical Competence
• Technical competence concerns the knowledge
and repertoire of behaviors one can utilize to
complete a task successfully.
• Followers with technical competence earn greater
rewards, exert influence in their groups, and have
greater say in decisions.
• For leaders, technical competence is related to
improved managerial promotion rates, better
training skills, lower rates of group conflict, and
higher motivation levels among followers.
3-14
Building Technical Competence
(continued)
• Both leaders and followers can improve
technical competence by:
– Determining how the job contributes to the overall
mission and success of the organization
– Becoming an expert in the job through education,
training, observation, and teaching
– Seeking opportunities to broaden experiences by
working on team projects and visiting other parts of
the organization
3-15
Building Effective Relationships with
Superiors
• Building an effective relationship with superiors
involves understanding the superior’s world by:
– Learning the superior’s personal and organizational
objectives
– Realizing that superiors do not have all the answers and
have both strengths and weaknesses
– Keeping the superior informed about various activities in
the work group or new developments or opportunities in
the field
3-16
Building Effective Relationships with
Superiors (continued)
• Building an effective relationship with superiors
requires followers to adapt to the superior’s
style by:
– Clarifying expectations about their role on the team,
committee, or work group
– Listing major responsibilities and use them to guide
discussions with the superior about other ways to
accomplish the task and relative priorities of the tasks
– Being honest and dependable
3-17
Building Effective Relationships with
Peers
• Research suggests that a key requirement of
leadership effectiveness is the ability to build
strong alliances with others, such as peers.
• Building effective relationships with peers
involves:
– Recognizing common interests and goals
– Understanding peers’ tasks, problems, and rewards
– Practicing a Theory Y attitude
3-18
Development Planning
• Developmental planning is the systematic process
of building knowledge and experience or changing
behavior. Peterson and Hicks claim that there are
5 interrelated phases to developmental planning:
– Identifying development needs
– Analyzing data to identify and prioritize development
needs
– Using prioritized development needs to create a focused
and achievable development plan
– Periodically reviewing the plan, reflecting on learning,
and modifying or updating the plan as appropriate
– Transferring learning to new environments
3-19
Conducting a GAPS Analysis
• The first phase in the development planning
process is to conduct a GAPS (goals, abilities,
perceptions, standards) analysis which involves
the following steps:
– Identifying your career objectives
– Identifying your strengths and development needs
related to your career objectives
– Determining how your abilities, skills, and behaviors
are perceived by others based on 360-feedback or
performance reviews
– Determining the expectations your boss or
organization has for your career objectives
3-20
Identifying and Prioritizing Development
Needs: Gaps of GAPS
3-21
Bridging the Gaps: Building a
Development Plan
• There are 7 steps to developing a high impact
development plan:
– Step 1: career and development objectives
– Step 2: criteria for success
– Step 3: action steps
– Step 4: whom to involve and reassess dates
– Step 5: stretch assignments
– Step 6: resources
– Step 7: reflect with a partner
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