MIS 64158 Spring 2013 Hogue
If you learn only methods, you'll be tied to your methods, but
if you learn principles you can devise your own methods.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
Leadership and Managerial Assessment
64158
Spring, 2013
Instructor: Mary Hogue, Ph.D.
Office: A423
Phone: (330) 672-1148
Office Hours: Thursdays 3:00-6:00 pm, or at any mutually convenient
scheduled appointment
E-Mail: mhogue@kent.edu
Class meeting: Th 6:35-9:15 BSA 106
Required text: No text is required for this class. Assigned articles can be found at the university library website.
Course Objectives: This course offers students the opportunity to develop a better understanding of the concept of leadership and of themselves as leaders who manage others. Specific objectives are for students to develop:
- an understanding of leadership as a social process in which the leader, the follower, and the situation are equally important.
- an appreciation for how the process works through relationship building, communication, and influence.
- a skill set for developing themselves and others.
Course Overview: Course objectives will be met through extensive discussion of assigned reading material, in-class exercises, and application of the material to your own lives. The reading material and exercises offer examples of how certain concepts impact leadership. Through discussions led by me, you will gain a better understanding of why the concepts impact leadership.
Becoming a better leader is a life-long learning experience. One of the ways leaders become better is by reflecting on their previous experiences, those that were effective and those that were not. In class, we will work in small groups to help one another reflect on and analyze a previous leadership experiences in order to understand better why the outcome occurred and how those lessons can be used in future leadership experiences.
Course Structure: Long-lasting learning is an iterative process. You must go over the material many times and in many different ways in order to create a memory that can be called on in the future – called on to successfully respond to test questions, but more importantly, called on to help you as you lead others.
With that in mind, this class is structured to provide many ways for you to go through the material. Your first opportunity is reading. Each week we will cover a new dimension of the leadership process, and you will become familiar with the dimension by reading the assigned material before coming to class. Your next opportunity will occur as we discuss the material in class. To learn how to be a better leader, it is not sufficient to read material and memorize concepts. You must learn to integrate the new material with information you already have, and as the semester goes on, with course material you have just learned. Discussions are designed to help you develop a deeper level of understanding than you will have gained when you initially read the material.
Finally, at the end of each class, you will go through the material in small groups, sharing your previous experiences and applying your knew knowledge to help one another understand real-world leadership situations and through that, to become better leaders.
Grade Determinations: Grades will be earned through:
In-class exercises. You will work in groups of 2-3 people to share and examine a personal leadership experience, applying course material to both understand what happened and gain insights for improvement.
Points tied to these exercises will be earned in 2 ways. First is through short essay questions within each test. Second is through participation points assigned by your group members (and possibly adjusted by me if I feel point assignments were not fair) and based on your preparedness and your participation.
Tests. There will be three tests. Each will consist of multiple choice, short answer, and short essay questions. Although the tests are not designed to be cumulative, when responding to the short essay questions, you may feel free to pull concepts from previous material to create a more complete response.
Tests will begin at 6:35 and will end at 8:35. No one may begin a test after the first person has finished and left the room. No one may leave the room during testing time unless finished or given permission. Nothing can be on desks during tests. No electronic communication devices (telephone, laptop, etc.) can be turned on and within view during the test.
Tests will be hand-written. It is your responsibility to ensure that I am able to read your responses.
Total points available: Group participation 25
Test 1 100
Test 2 100
Final exam 100
Total 325
|
A 93-100 302.25-325 |
A- 90-92.99 292-302.24 |
B+ 88-89.99 286-291.99 |
B 83-87.99 269.75-285.99 |
B- 80-82.99 269.75-285.99 |
C+ 78-79.99 253.5-259.99 |
C 73-77.99 237.25-253.49 |
C- 70-72.99 227.5-237.24 |
D 60-69.99 195-227.49 |
F Below 60 Below 195 |
|
The Following Policies Apply to All Students in this Course
Students attending the course who do not have the proper prerequisite risk being deregistered from the class.
Students have responsibility to ensure they are properly enrolled in classes. You are advised to review your official class schedule (using Student Tools on FlashLine) during the first two weeks of the semester to ensure you are properly enrolled in this class and section. Should you find an error in your class schedule, you have until Sunday, Sunday, January 27, 2013 to correct the error. If registration errors are not corrected by this date and you continue to attend and participate in classes for which you are not officially enrolled, you are advised now that you will not receive a grade at the conclusion of the semester for any class in which you are not properly registered.
Academic honesty: Academic honesty: Cheating means to misrepresent the source, nature, or other conditions of your academic work (e.g., tests, papers, projects, assignments) so as to get undeserved credit. In addition, it is considered to cheating when one cooperates with someone else in any such misrepresentation. The use of the intellectual property of others without giving them appropriate credit is a serious academic offense. It is the University's policy that cheating or plagiarism result in receiving a failing grade for the work or course. Repeat offenses result in dismissal from the University.
For Spring 2013, the course withdrawal deadline is Sunday, March 24, 2013.
Students needing accessability: University policy 3342-3-01.3 requires that students with disabilities be provided reasonable accommodations to ensure their equal access to course content. If you have a documented disability and require accommodations, please contact the instructor at the beginning of the semester to make arrangements for necessary classroom adjustments. Please note, you must first verify your eligibility for these through Student Accessibility Services (contact 330-672-3391 or visit http://www.registrars.kent.edu/disability/ for more information on registration procedures).
Locating Assigned Reading Material
To locate assigned articles:
1) On the KSU Library homepage, in the “Articles” tab, click “Databases.”
2) An alphabetical list of all databases will come up. Find Business Source Complete. If you are not able to locate the article with this database, you may need to go to an alternative database, PsychInfo.
3) Make sure that you have the “Advanced Search” open. It has 3 search boxes available instead of just 1.
4) Put the 3 pieces of information on the syllabus schedule into the search boxes (article title, author, journal title), and it should take you right to the article. To be honest, you can usually find an article with only 2 of the 3 pieces of information, so if you can’t find the article with all 3, it’s possible that either you or I have misspelled something, in which case, try fewer pieces of information.
**If you are working from home, download the Kent VPN (you can find this at the library’s website) and make sure it is connected.
**If you are unable to locate an article, let me know, and I can send my copy to you. Please make every effort to locate articles on your own, contacting me only when you’ve exhausted all other avenues.
Schedule
Following is a tentative class schedule. Changes to this syllabus will be made either in class or through Flashline email. You are responsible for any changes made.
Understanding Primary Parts of the Leadership Process
Date |
Course Topic |
Assigned Readings: Title, (author,) journal |
1/17 |
The leadership process
|
Superleadership: Beyond the myth of heroic leadership, (Manz & Sims), Organizational Dynamics
Managers and leaders: Are they different? (Zaleznick), Harvard Business Review *Choose either the 1977 original or the 2004 reprint
Giving up control doesn’t mean losing control (Swanson) PM Network
Leadership is a conversation (Groysberg & Slind) Harvard Business Review
|
1/24 |
The Leader
|
Do traits matter? (Kirkpatrick & Locke), Academy of Management Executive
The general intelligence factor, (Gottfredson), Scientific American
The positive value of emotions (Fredrickson) American Scientist. (If you have problems finding this, let me know.)
Women and the labyrinth of leadership, (Eagly & Carli), Harvard Business Review |
1/31 |
The Followers
|
What every leader needs to know about followers, (Kellerman), Harvard Business Review
Followership. It’s personal, too, (Goffee & Jones), Harvard Business Review
In praise of followers (Kelley) Harvard Business Review
Empowered, (Bernoff & Schadler) Harvard Business Review
|
2/7 |
The Situation
|
What holds the modern company together? (Goffee & Jones), Harvard Business Review
Zeitgeist leadership, (Mayo & Nohria) Harvard Business Review
Embracing complexity, (Sullivan), Harvard Business Review
When winning is everything, (Malhotra, Ku & Murninghan) Harvard Business Review
|
2/14 |
Test 1
|
|
The Leadership Process at Work
2/21 |
Influence
|
Harnessing the science of persuasion, (Cialdini), Harvard Business Review
The decision to trust (Hurley) Harvard Business Review
Change the way you persuade (Williams & Miller) Harvard Business Review
Follow the leader, (Gigerenzer) Harvard Business Review |
2/28 |
Power |
Power, dependence and effective management, (Kotter), Harvard Business Review
Power play (Pfeffer) HBR
The bases of social power (French & Raven) *You can find this at GoogleBooks in The Negotiation Sourcebook by Asherman & Asherman
The management of organizational justice, (Cropanzano, Bowen & Gilliland), Academy of Management Perspectives |
3/7 |
The relationship
(continued on next page) |
Managing authenticity, (Goffee & Jones), Harvard Business Review
Making relationships work, (Coutu), Harvard Business Review
Social intelligence and the biology of leadership (Goleman & Boyatzis) Harvard Business Review
The essential interdependence of leadership and followership (Hollander) Current Directions in Psychological Science
|
3/14
|
Communication
|
Strong communication skills a must for today’s leaders, (Barrett), Handbook of Business Strategy
The art of listening, (Hesselbein), Leadership Excellence
The four truths of the storyteller (Guber) Harvard Business Review
Learning charisma (Antonakis, Fenley & Liechti) Harvard Business Review
|
3/21 |
Communication |
No reading. We’ll watch a video
|
3/28 |
|
Spring Break |
4/4 |
Test 2 |
|
Becoming a better leader
4/11 |
Developing followers: Workgroup and global diversities |
Women in management: Delusions of progress, (Carter & Silva) Harvard Business Review
A question of color: A debate on race in the U.S. workpalce, (Thomas & Wetlaufe) Harvard Business Review
The existential necessity of midlife change, (Strenger & Ruttenberg) Harvard Business Review
Cultural constraints in management theories, (Hofstede), The Academy of Management Executive
|
4/18 |
Personal development
|
In praise of the incomplete leader (Ancona, Malone et al.) Harvard Business Review
How successful leaders think, (Martin), Harvard Business Review
Making yourself indispensable, (Zenger, Folkman & Edinger) Harvard Business Review
Developing mindful leaders (LeBarre) http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2011/12/developing_mindful_leaders.html
|
4/25 |
Personal development
|
Effective leadership: The Pygmalion effect, (Rheem) Harvard Business Review
Narcissistic leaders: The incredible pros and inevitable cons, (Maccoby), Harvard Business Review
How bad leadership happens, (Kellerman), Leader to Leader
Be a better leader, have a richer life (Friedman) Harvard Business Review
|
5/2 |
Class wrap-up |
|
5/9 |
Final exam
|
5:45-8:00 pm |