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BAD 64158 Summer 2010 Knapp

KENT STATE UNIVERSITY

LEADERSHIP & MANAGERIAL ASSESSMENT

BA D 64158—Summer 2010—Section #010—Call #10781

MONDAYS & WEDNESDAYS, 6:00-9:50 PM, BSA 215

Instructor:      Dr. Deborah Knapp

Office:            College of Business Administration, BA A424

Telephone:          330.672.1147

E-mail:            dknapp1@kent.edu —the best way to get a quick response!

Office Hours: Mons & Thurs, 5:00-6:00pm, Tues & Weds, 4:30-6:00pm or by appointment

MATERIALS

Text: No text is required for this class. Assigned articles can be found at the university library website.

Professional Personal Assessment: A psychological testing firm will conduct extensive tests concerning students’ personal abilities, dispositions, etc. concerning leadership. A mandatory $50 course fee will be assessed through the Bursar’s Office. All students must participate in this process to receive a grade in the course.

Miscellaneous Course Materials: Various course materials will be available on-line by using your FlashLine account to log onto the Blackboard/WebCt/Vista website. A copy of the syllabus can also be found at the Department of Management & Information Systems website at http://#

COURSE ADMINISTRATION

This course will be conducted as a hybrid of in-class and on-line course content delivery (approximately 50% of class meetings will be held on-line and approximately 50% of course content will be delivered on-line). Consult the syllabus for the schedule of classes to be conducted on-line.

COURSE DESCRIPTION

This course is designed to provide participants with a broad overview of topics relevant to leadership and to expose students to a variety of leadership perspectives and practices in order to enhance individual development and effectiveness as a leader and manager. The major concepts concerning leadership and management will be presented, explored and integrated in order to assist students in understanding how leadership dynamics and managerial skills can be used to improve organizational functioning and outcomes. Emphasis will be placed on the appropriate use of leadership and management tools in achieving individual, group and organizational goals. Moreover, the course will provide students with individual assessments of personal characteristics that influence leadership styles. Through lecture, class discussions, reflection and synthesis papers, and experiential exercises, the contributions of leadership dynamics and managerial skills to improved short- and long-term organizational functioning will be considered.

COURSE OBJECTIVES

·    To enhance students’ understanding of leadership concepts, contexts, and competencies, enabling them to apply this knowledge through engagement, practice and reflection.

·    To improve students’ understanding of the key principles and practices of leadership that improve leadership and managerial skills.

·    To enable students to apply organizational leadership concepts though critical thinking.

·    To improve students’ evaluative effectiveness with respect to particular organizational leadership and management styles.

·    To improve students’ understanding of their own leadership and managerial styles as revealed by various evaluative instruments and to enable students to assess the validity and usefulness of these instruments.

COURSE REQUIREMENTS

Leadership Portfolio and Individual Action Plan—The application of class material toward the understanding of leadership dynamics is a major objective of this course. To facilitate this process, each student will compile a “leadership portfolio” and prepare an individual action plan related to improving his or her own leadership abilities. The portfolio will be comprised of various activities and assessments that will be completed at various times during the semester (the leadership portfolio is for students’ use in developing their actions plans and need not be provided to the professor). The paper (action plan) should be based on a reflection of the knowledge you gain concerning your own leadership and managerial abilities and the information you acquire from lectures, discussions, readings, handouts, and experiential exercises (i.e., the contents of your leadership portfolio) The paper should include the following:

·    Your goals concerning your leadership abilities. These may be personal and/or professional. You should start with a personal mission statement and align your goals according to the ideas articulated in that statement (http://www.franklincovey.com/msb/missions/login or http://www.nightingale.com/tMission_ExampleStatement.aspx) for examples and help in developing a personal mission statement).

·    A review of your strengths and weaknesses with respect to leadership abilities based upon the outcomes of your individual assessments and self-reflection.

·    The specific steps you would take to improve your weaknesses and take advantage of your strengths. The basis of your recommendations should be supported by course material and at least five outside sources. These sources must be cited in the development of your plan and included in reference section. Sources may include (but are not limited to) academic journals, practitioner journals, popular business press articles, books, internet sites, or interviews.

·    How these improvements will enhance your future (or current) working relationships and your ability to attain personal and career-related goals.

The purpose of this exercise is to (a) provide a concrete strategy for improving your leadership and managerial abilities, (b) provide added appreciation for the complexity involved in applying the concepts addressed in this course to improved leadership abilities, and (c) provide an additional opportunity to demonstrate your mastery of course content.

Guidelines for papers:

·    All papers must be double-spaced with 1-inch margins in a 12-point font and should be approximately ten to twenty typewritten pages (the page requirement does not include appendices, graphs, figures, tables, etc.; there is no limit to the number of pages devoted to these types of exhibits—however, NO exhibits are required).

·    No plastic covers, special folders, or binders—just staple the paper at the corner.

·    Due Date: the final day of class (Wednesday, July 14th).

·    The paper is worth 35% of your final grade.

Film Deconstruction and Evaluation—We will be viewing the HBO miniseries Generation Kill as part of our exploration of leadership concepts. For six class periods we will view one hour of the 7 hour series (with the exception of the first viewing in which we will view two hours of the series). Following each couple of viewings, you be will asked to deconstruct and/or evaluate a specific concept from that day’s screening. Each analysis will be due one week from the last included screening and should be 1-3 pages in length. Your four papers will account for 25% of your final grade.

Journaling—During the course of this class, you will keep a journal (you may do it in a notebook or on the computer). You should have two journal entries per week. The journal should assist you in writing your action plan, either by improving your attempts at self-reflection or by affording you opportunities to begin determining the content of your action plan. However, the content of your journal is up to you. Your musings may include anything to do with the course, your job, your personal life, your career and/or life aspirations, or a simple stream of consciousness. Journals will be turned twice: June 28th and July 14th. Your journal will account for 25% of your grade.

Participation—Students will receive credit for class participation, which will account for 10% of your final grade. Attendance is required to earn class participation credit. Each individual will be evaluated on the quality and quantity of her/his participation during class sessions. To receive an acceptable participation grade you must be consistently knowledgeable concerning all assigned readings and you must actively participate in class discussions. Experiential exercises and cases will be used as an opportunity for students to apply many of the concepts covered in this course. In addition to the influence these cases/exercises have on your participation grade, your grade will also depend on the quality and quantity of cases/exercises you complete during class. Cases/Exercises may be evaluated as groups and/or on an individual basis. Generally, cases/exercises will be conducted during class (although some outside work will be required occasionally) and your written work will be collected when the case/exercise discussion is completed. If you are not in class, you will receive a zero for that class period’s case/exercise.

Internet Assignment— Students will be expected to find and summarize information they find on the World Wide Web that relates to one of the covered course topics. Information may be from sources found using simple internet searches or from internet sites of which you are aware. You will be asked to share your findings with the class by preparing a one- or two- paragraph summary about the site and presenting this information to the class. For the presentation, students will remain seated and the instructor will display students’ websites to the class. Students will describe the sites (e.g., its function, the type of information that can be found on the site, who might use said information, and/or how the information might be used) to the class. Students must also provide a typed copy (hand-written papers will not be accepted under any circumstances) of the one- or two- paragraph summary to the instructor on the day it is presented (be sure to include the web address of the site that you "visit"). The internet assignment is worth 5% of your final grade.

GRADES

Grades will be calculated according to performance on individual action plan (35%), film deconstruction and evaluation (25%), journal (25%), participation (10%), and internet assignment (5%). Final grades will be assigned as follows:

A

A-

B+

B

B-

C+

C

C-

D+

D

F

90 - 100%

87 - 89%

83 - 86%

80 - 82%

77-79%

73-76%

70-72%

67-69%

63-66%

60-62%

0-59%

Registration: Students have responsibility to ensure they are properly enrolled in classes. You are advised to review your official class schedule (using Web for Students) 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 Thursday, June 17, 2010 (for Summer I) to correct the error with your advising office. 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.

Course Withdrawal Deadline: The course withdrawal deadline is Monday, July 5, 2010.


CLASS PROCEDURES

1.      If my office hours are not convenient for you, please feel free to call for an appointment. In addition, the most efficient way to communicate with me is via e-mail. I strongly encourage you to take advantage of the electronic messaging capabilities made available to you by the university!

2.      Please tell me about any problems you are having while there is still time to do something about them!

3.      Each student must turn in an original piece of work (copies of the work of others will not be accepted; however, you may work together on your case/exercise assignments).

4.      Exams are to be taken at the scheduled time (this also means you need to be on-time for the exam—more than 20 minutes late is a missed exam). If you miss an exam due to a legitimate reason (e.g., illness, death in the immediate family), a make-up exam will be given (you will be required to provide an official university excuse to be eligible for a make-up exam). If you do not provide a legitimate excuse, no make-up exam will be granted.

5.      Reading assignments are expected to be completed prior to class attendance so that you may participate in class discussion. However, we will not discuss every aspect of the assigned chapters or supplemental material. This does not release the student from the responsibility of knowing the material for examination purposes. Conversely, I may include material in class not covered by the text (you are also responsible for this information).

6.      Attendance at class is expected. If you miss a class, YOU are responsible for obtaining lecture notes and other material from another student. DO NOT ASK TO BORROW MY NOTES! To succeed in this course, you must complete your reading assignments and attend class. Also, please do not e-mail or call me with questions such as “what did I miss?” or “will we be doing a case tonight?”—you need to come to class. If you cannot attend, reread the beginning of #4. Moreover, missed classes will negatively affect your participation grade (it IS possible to receive a failing participation grade). Finally, before you are tempted to ask “What did I miss?” or “What will I miss?” please consider the following (tongue-in-cheek) responses to said query:

Nothing. When we realized you weren't here we sat with our hands folded on our desks in silence, for the full two and a half hours.

Everything. I gave an exam worth 40 per cent of the grade for this term and assigned some readings due today on which I'm about to hand out a quiz worth 50 per cent.

Nothing. None of the content of this course has value or meaning. Take as many days off as you like. Any activities we undertake as a class, I assure you will not matter either to you or me and are without purpose.

Everything. A few minutes after we began last time a shaft of light descended and an angel or other heavenly being appeared and revealed to us what each woman or man must do to attain divine wisdom in this life and the hereafter. This is the last time the class will meet before we disperse to bring this good news to all people on earth.

Nothing. When you are not present how could something significant occur?

Everything. Contained in this classroom is a microcosm of human existence assembled for you to query, examine and ponder. And you weren't here.

7.      Major grammatical or spelling errors on any written work could result in a significant penalty with respect to the grade you receive.  Carefully proof your papers for errors (you may even want to have a friend read your work). Also, try reading your work aloud. Doing so will assist you in quickly identifying awkward phrases and poor sentence structure. Use grammar and spell check!

8.      Do not come late to class in order to complete an internet assignment or finish an exercise/ assignment. If this is the case, the assignment will not be accepted. Moreover, coming to class shortly before dismissal will result in a lower participation grade.

9.      You must use the internet and World Wide Web to communicate with me and receive an acceptable grade. You must update your FlashLine account as this is the e-mail address to which I will be sending all class correspondence.

10.  While I have attempted to create a course that will be both fun and informative, please do not mistake the levity that will characterize much of our class time as an indication that this is not a meaningful and important course or that I don’t take my responsibility as your professor seriously. Occasionally our discussions may veer from a direct path as your fellow students may have questions or interests that may appear to be related only tangentially to the topic being discussed. These discussions are important to our exploration of course content and therefore, I ask that you are respectful of your fellow students’ desire for increased knowledge. Everyone (including me) can benefit from such improvisation.

POLICY ON 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. 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 (0 points) for the work or course. Repeat offenses may result in dismissal from the University.

STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES

University policy 3342-3-18 requires that students with disabilities be provided reasonable accommodations to ensure their equal access equal access course content. If you have 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 the Student Disability Services (contact 330-672-3391 or visit www.kent.edu/sds for more information on registration procedures).


Course Schedule (subject to change)

Changes to this syllabus will be made either in class or through FlashLine email. You are responsible for any changes made.

Date/Location

Activities/Assignments

 

Monday

6/14/2009

“Getting to know you…”

Internet & Group Assignments

Leadership Basics

Generation Kill: Part 1 “Get Some”

Generation Kill: Part 2 “Cradle of Civilization”

GK Assignment 1

Read the article, Superleadership: Beyond the myth of heroic leadership by Manz & Sims in Organizational Dynamics. Using what you learn from the article, apply the classifications the authors describe to at least three individuals in the battalion (they needn’t be officers). You should supply examples to justify your analysis using scenes from either of the two episodes.  Next, select your three favorite characters from the film and very briefly explain why they are your favorites. Also give your opinion of their leadership abilities/qualities; your opinion of those abilities/qualities may be positive or negative.

 

Wednesday

6/16/2009

Generation Kill: Part 3 “Screwby”

“TAKE AWAY” DISCUSSION OF FOLLOWING ARTICLES:

Superleadership: Beyond the myth of heroic leadership

        Manz & Sims; Organizational Dynamics

Managers and leaders: Are they different?

        Zaleznick; Harvard Business Review

Asking the right questions about leadership

        Hackman & Wageman; American Psychologist

 

Monday

6/21/2009

GK Assignment 1 DUE

Generation Kill: Part 4 “Combat Jack”

GK Assignment 2

Read the articles When followers become toxic by Offerman in Harvard Business Review and What every leader needs to know about followers by Kellerman in Harvard Business Review. Based on the your viewing of episodes three and four, select three characters and identify what you believe to be their “follower type.” Next, identify at least one example of a toxic follower and based on your understanding of Offerman, explain why you believe said follower to be “toxic.”

“TAKE AWAY” DISCUSSION OF FOLLOWING ARTICLES:

When followers become toxic

         Offerman,  Harvard Business Review

What every leader needs to know about followers

        Kellerman, Harvard Business Review

Competent jerks, lovable fools, and the formation of social networks

         Casciaro and Lobo, Harvard Business Review

 

Wednesday

6/23/2009

On-line

Personal Assessment (taken on-line)

Assignment: Read the article Women and the labyrinth of leadership

Eagly & Carli; Harvard Business Review, then locate at least one article or news item that pertains to something articulated by Eagly and Carli. In a paragraph or two, describe what in the article is relevant to Eagly and Carli’s piece. Then, at a predetermined time, have an on-line discussion with your group members about what you’ve found and what you think/believe concerning gender issues in leadership. Collect your group’s thoughts in one document. I will collect your individual assessments and “found” articles as well as the outcome of your group’s discussion next week after a brief discussion.

 

Monday

6/28/2009

GK Assignment 2 DUE

Journals Due

Generation Kill: Part 5 “Burning Dog”

Generation Kill: Part 6 “Stay Frosty”

GK Assignment 3

Read the articles The use of humor in the workplace by Offerman in Harvard Business Review and The positive value of emotions by Fredrickson in American Scientist. Based on the your viewing of episodes five and six, discuss how humor has either helped and/or hindered the efforts/outcomes of individual soldiers, the teams, the platoon and/or the battalion. Next, identify at least one example of how negative and/or positive emotions have affected the outcomes for the Marines and their leaders.

 “TAKE AWAY” DISCUSSION OF FOLLOWING ARTICLES:

Women and the labyrinth of leadership

        Eagly & Carli; Harvard Business Review

 

Wednesday

6/30/2009

Psychological Assessment Debriefing (Dr. G. Kustis)

“TAKE AWAY” DISCUSSION OF FOLLOWING ARTICLES:

The use of humor in the workplace

      Romero & Cruthirds, Academy of Management Perspectives

The positive value of emotions

      Fredrickson; American Scientist.

 

Monday

7/5/2009

NO CLASS—4TH OF JULY!!! (observed)

 

Wednesday

7/7/2009

GK Assignment 3 DUE

Generation Kill: Part 7 “Bomb in the Garden”

GK Assignment 4

For your final paper, I would like you to “revisit” your first paper. If you recall, in that assignment you were asked to select your three favorite characters and explain why they were your favorites. You were also asked to give your opinion of their leadership abilities/qualities (if any). In this paper, I would like you to discuss whether you agree with your initial assessment of these three individuals (in terms of being a favorite character and of their leadership qualities/abilities) and why you continue to hold the same opinion(s) or why you do not hold the same opinion(s).

“TAKE AWAY” DISCUSSION OF FOLLOWING ARTICLES:

In praise of the incomplete leader

        Ancore, Malone et al.; Harvard Business Review

Narcissistic leaders: The incredible pros and inevitable cons

        Maccoby; Harvard Business Review

How bad leadership happens

        Kellerman; Leader to Leader

 

Monday

7/12/2009

On-line

Continue to work on GK Assignment 4, Journals and Action Plans

Read the two articles below. Once again, at a predetermined time, have an on-line discussion with your group members about both articles and what you believe to be the major “take-aways” from each article. Collect your group’s thoughts in one document and send them to me via e-mail no later than 5pm on Tuesday.

Putting leaders on the couch

        Coutu; Harvard Business Review

Presidential leadership and charisma: The effects of metaphor

        Mio, Riggio, Levin & Reese: The Leadership Quarterly

 

Wednesday

7/14/2009

On-line

Course Wrap-up;  GK Assignment 4, Journals, and Action Plans Due

 

 

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