PU550 Public Health Leadership and Administration - Unit 2/3 Traits, Skills, and Styles of Leadership Flashcards
What has been regarded as a key factor in determining a person’s ability to lead?
Personal traits
A distinguishing characteristic or quality possessed by a person.
Traits commonly associated with leadership have included ambition, conscientiousness, integrity, persistence, and honesty, among others.
However, this line of thinking soon fell out of favor. As early as
1948, Stogdill found that possession of a certain combination of traits did not
necessarily result in a person becoming a leader. Based on Stogdill’s studies,
researchers soon came to understand that models based solely on traits failed
to explain the emergence of leadership or leader effectiveness.
APA 7th Edition (American Psychological Assoc.)
James Holsinger. (2018). Leadership for Public Health: Theory and Practice. HAP Book.
What is the combination of qualities and characteristics that form an individual’s distinctive character?
Personality
What is the realistic certainty in one’s own judgement, ideas, ability, power, decision making, and skills?
Self-confidence
What is a person’s nature, particularly with regard to emotionalism or excitability?
Temperament
What is the possession of the manner or skill to do something?
Ability
What is something essential or strongly desired, usually physiological in nature?
Need
What is a reason for doing something in response to social experiences or stimuli?
Motive
What is a person’s inclination or tendencies toward a certain temperament?
Disposition
What is an attitude or belief dealing with ethics, morals, or what is right and wrong?
Value
What envelopes the various attributes possessed by individuals that includes personality (distinct character), self-confidence (certainty in one’s self), temperament (level of emotionalism), ability (intellectual abilities), needs (like hunger, thirst, etc.), motive (social needs like power, esteem of others, personal achievement, etc.), disposition (inclination or tendency towards a temperament), and value (attitudes held concerning right and wrong)?
Traits
They produce consistent leadership performance regardless of the organizational situation.
What influences the individual’s perceptions, preferences, and behavior choices?
Values; the attitudes an individual holds concerning what is right and wrong.
What are the three taxonomies of skills that are abilities to perform activities in an effective manner and are determined through a combination of learning and heredity?
Technical skills, interpersonal skills, and conceptual skills.
Technical skills are concerned with the use for things such as tools and equipment.
Interpersonal skills are social skills and involve people.
Conceptual skills are based on concepts and ideas and are cognitive in nature.
What are the two other skills that do not necessary involve leadership and pertain more to management?
Administrative and strategic skills.
What is an old approach to leadership studies that was popular prior to 1950, which focused on the traits of individuals who were thought to be great men?
The great man theory.
Over time, however, research demonstrated poor
correlation between personal traits and successful leadership, and studies of
effective leaders suggested that leadership ability was not genetically based.
APA 7th Edition (American Psychological Assoc.)
James Holsinger. (2018). Leadership for Public Health: Theory and Practice. HAP Book.
What did Stogdill determine in a literature review of 124 trait studies (1904-1948) that ultimately lead to the demise of the great man theory?
He demonstrated a pattern in which the concept of a leader was based on people acquiring status in an organization by exhibiting the ability to work with a group in attaining mutual goals.
Stogdill found that relevant leadership traits included intelligence, self-confidence, alertness to others’ needs, understanding of tasks, initiative and persistence in addressing problems, and
desire to take responsibility and hold positions of dominance and control.
The key result of Stogdill’s work was the discovery that each trait was dependent on the specific
situation and that none of the traits were themselves required to produce success in
every situation.
Leaders, are in fact, not like other people. What did Kirkpatrick and Locke find in 1991?
They proposed that traits differentiating leaders from nonleaders included drive,
motivation, integrity, confidence, cognitive ability, and task knowledge.
They also stated that these traits can be either inborn or learned.
In 2013, Northouse conducted a review of past studies and examined a lengthy list of five major leadership traits that individuals should possess. What are they?
Intelligence, self-confidence, determination, integrity, and sociability.
What is the capacity for understanding, reasoning, and perception, including the aptitude for grasping facts and the relationships between them?
Intelligence
When can leadership become impeded when referring to intelligence?
If the leader’s intellectual ability is significantly different from that of the followers.
Effective leaders must be able to explain complex concepts in a manner that
meets the needs of the followers.