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Leadership in Youth Program Management: What is Your Style

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someone you choose to follow to a place you wouldn't go by ... Early theory: Authoritarian, Decomocratic, & Laissez-faire styles. Lewin, Lippitt, & White, 1939 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Leadership in Youth Program Management: What is Your Style


1
Leadership in Youth Program Management What is
Your Style ?
  • Agricultural Education 643
  • Spring 2005
  • Beverly Kelbaugh, Ph.D.
  • Franklin County Extension Director

2
A leader is
  • someone you choose to follow to a place you
    wouldnt go by yourself.

3
Evolution of Leadership Theory
  • Trait Theory 1940s 1950s
  • Behavioral Styles Theory
  • Mid 1960s
  • Situational Theory 1970s
  • Transactional Theory 1990s
  • Transformational late 1990s

4
  • More than anything else, leaders build bridges
    that help us move from where we are to where we
    want to be.

5
Trait Theory
  • Leaders are born, not made
  • Historical perspective
  • Great-man approach
  • Search for universal traits of great leaders
  • Popular during 1925-1950
  • Kreitner, 1998

6
Leadership Traits
  • Intelligence
  • Scholarship
  • Dependability in exercising responsibility
  • Activity and social participation
  • Socioeconomic status
  • Stogdill, 1948

7
Behavioral Styles Theory
  • Focused on patterns of leadership behavior (not
    personal traits)
  • Early theory Authoritarian, Decomocratic,
    Laissez-faire styles
  • Lewin, Lippitt, White, 1939

8
Development Level of Follower
  • High Moderate Low

D1 D2 D3 D4
D4 High Commitment High Competence
D3 Variable Commitment High Competence
D2 Low Commitment Some
Competence
D1 High Commitment Low Competence
9
Behavioral Styles TheoryThe leadership grid
high
Consideration
low
high
Production
  • Low-low Impoverished management
  • Low-high Country Club management
  • High-low Authority-compliance
  • High-high Team management
  • -Blake Mouton, 1991

10
Situational Theory
  • Directive Behavior - the amount of direction and
    control a leader gives
  • Supportive Behavior the amount of support and
    encouragement a leader provides
  • Developmental Level the competence and
    commitment that a follower exhibits in performing
    a specific task.

11
Situational Leadership
  • Directive Behavior
  • Sets goals objectives
  • Plans organizes in advance
  • Identifies priorities
  • Clarifies roles
  • Establishes time lines
  • Evaluation processes
  • Demonstrates how to do specific tasks
  • Supportive Behavior
  • Listens to employee
  • Encourages, affirms
  • Seeks input
  • Communicates feelings
  • Discloses self information
  • Facilitaties problem solving
  • Aids employee team building

12
The Four Leadership Styles
High Supportive Low Directive Behavior
High Directive High Supportive Behavior
(HIGH)
SUPPORTING
COACHING
S2
S3
SUPPORTIVE BEHAVIOR
S4
S1
DELEGATING
DIRECTING
High Directive Low Supportive Behavior
Low Supportive Low Directive Behavior
(HIGH)
DIRECTIVE BEHAVIOR
(LOW)
13
Transactional Leadership
  • Based upon previous assumptions
  • Leaders control own destinies
  • Leaders function in a stable, predictable
    environment
  • Beckhard Pritchard, 1992

14
Transactional Leadership
  • Stresses exchange between leader, colleagues,
    followers
  • Leader specifies what is expected of followers
  • Simple lines of communication
  • Highly hierarchical
  • Bass, 1995

15
Transformational Leadership
  • Stresses personal values/beliefs shared
    values/beliefs
  • Transforms organizations/communities by first
    transforming oneself
  • Getting followers to transcend their own
    self-interest for the sake of the team or
    organization
  • Capacity based (can be developed)

16
Role Competencies of the New Managerial Mentor
ROLE Innovator FOCUS Change COMPETENCIES
Visioning, Championing, Diffusing

TRANSFORMATIONAL
ROLE Collaborator
FOCUS Relationships
COMPETENCIES Facilitating Coaching
Dialoguing
Learning Leadership
MARKETPLACE
INFRASTRUCTURE
ROLE Integrator FOCUS Alignment COMPETENCIES
Organizing Improving
Bridging
ROLE Producer FOCUS Results COMPETENCIES
Targeting Improvising
Measuring
TRANSACTIONAL
17
Five Lessons for Leaders in the 21st Century
  • Focus the majority of your efforts on the future.
  • Understand the nature of fundamental change.
  • Appreciate complex systems and how they work.
  • Examine your leadership style to seehow it
    affects productivity.
  • Create shared vision to build bridges to the
    future.

18
Characteristics of a leader never change.
  • Loyalty
  • Compassion
  • Communication
  • Courage
  • Commitment
  • Trust
  • Inspiration
  • Integrity

19
Five Fundamental Practices of Exemplary Leadership
  • Challenging the Process
  • Inspiring a Shared Vision
  • Enabling Others to Act
  • Modeling the Way
  • Encouraging the Heart
  • Kouzes and Posner - 1995

20
The Ten Commitments of Leadership
  • Search out challenging opportunities to change,
    grow, innovate and improve
  • Experiment, take risks, and learn from the
    accompanying mistakes
  • Envision an uplifting and ennobling future

21
Ten Commitments of Leadership cont.
  • Set the example by behaving in ways that are
    consistent with shared values.
  • Enlist others in a common vision by appealing to
    their values, interests, hopes and dreams.
  • Achieve small wins that promote consistent
    progress and build commitment

22
Ten Commitments of Leadership Cont.
  • Strengthen people by giving power away, providing
    choice, developing competence, assigning critical
    tasks, and offering visible support.
  • Recognize individual contributions to the success
    of every project.
  • Celebrate team accomplishments regularly.
  • Foster collaboration by promoting cooperative
    goals and building trust.

23
  • The final test of a leader is that he leaves
    behind him in other men the conviction and
    will to carry on.
  • Walter Lippman, 20th century American Journalist,
    author and public philosopher
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