Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Chapter 13 - Leadership in Organizations Multiple Choice Questions 1. Based on statements about the late George Jackson, former CEO of Urban Box Offices, he would best be described as a(n) a) charismatic leader. b) directive autocrat. c) permissive autocrat. d) directive democrat. Answer a Page 469 2. The process whereby one individual influences other group members toward the attainment of defined group or organizational goals is known as a) power. b) leadership. c) social influence. d) motivation. Answer b Page 471 3. By definition, leadership is primarily a process involving a) the use of influence. b) the use of power. c) participative management. d) organizational politics. Answer a Page 471 4. The use of influence in leadership is directed toward a) the attainment of personal goals. b) the practice of organizational politics. c) the attainment of organizational goals and purposes. d) None of the above. Answer c Page 471 5. For many, a leader differs from a manager in that a) leadership involves the use of social influence and management does not. b) leaders are concerned with implementation while management is concerned with formulating and planning. c) leadership is participative in nature and management is not. d) leaders establish and formulate the mission, managers implement it. Answer d Page 471-472 6. Which of the following is true about management and leadership? a) Often the differences are blurred in practice. b) The difference between the two often leads to tension within an organization. c) The distinction between the two is quite clear. d) There is no real difference except in theory. Answer a Page 472 214 Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 215 7. If Joe is more of a manager than a leader in his company, he would tend to a) create the organization's mission rather than implement it. b) formulate strategy rather than create the strategic vision. c) establish direction for the company rather than monitor its progress. d) All of these. Answer b Page 472 The idea that people possess certain characteristics that make them leader’s a) is the contingency theory of leadership. b) Is the great person theory. c) describes normative theory. d) is the basis of situational leadership theory. Answer b Page 473 8. 9. Scientist have acknowledged that leaders should demonstrate multiple domains of intelligence. Those domains include a) physical, mental, and emotional intelligence. b) cognitive, emotional, and cultural intelligence. c) cognitive, emotional, and social intelligence. d) technical, interpersonal, and cognitive intelligence. Answer b Page 473 10. Researchers have identified which of the following characteristics of successful leaders? a) Ambition, the desire for achievement. b) The ability to integrate and interpret large amounts of information. c) Creativity and originality. d) All of these. Answer d Page 473, Table 13.1 11. The desire to exercise influence over others to reach shared goals is known as a) social influence. b) leadership motivation. c) social power motivation. d) organizational politics. Answer b Page 474 12. Joanne shows the ability to cooperate with others, develop networks and coalitions, and generally work with subordinates rather than try to dominate them. This is an example of a) personalized power motivation. b) social influence. c) socialized power motivation. d) prosocial behavior. Answer c Page 474 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 216 Part 5 - Influencing Others 13. A behavioral approach to leadership focuses on a) what the leader does. b) who the leader is. c) who are the followers of the leader. d) when the leader uses what style of leadership. Answer a Page 474 14. A supervisor whose actions seem to fall in between an autocratic style and a delegation style would be said to have a ____ leadership style. a) directive b) two-tiered c) permissive d) participative Answer d Page 475 15. The _____ model of leadership looks at how leaders allocate their influence to followers. a) situational leadership b) trait leadership c) LPC leadership d) autocratic-delegation continuum Answer d Page 475 16. The two-dimensional model of subordinate participation was designed to a) clarify what characteristics marked the leader. b) address the problem of oversimplification of the autocratic-delegation model. c) show the differences between managers and leaders. d) address the gender bias inherent in the LPC model of leadership. Answer b Page 475 17. Joe and Wit are discussing how much to let their subordinates participate in the restructuring decision. In terms of the two-dimensional model of subordinate participation, they are discussing the ___ continuum. a) autocratic-delegation b) permissive-directive c) autocratic-democratic d) autocratic-directive Answer c Page 475 18. Karen is the kind of leader who makes decisions unilaterally and closely supervises the activities of her subordinates. Her leadership behavior is that of a a) directive democrat. b) directive autocrat. c) permissive democrat. d) permissive autocrat. Answer b Page 476 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 217 19. In work settings where employees are inexperienced or underqualified for their jobs, or when subordinates adopt an adversarial stance, the best leadership style is a) permissive autocrat. b) directive autocrat. c) permissive democrat. d) directive democrat. Answer b Page 476 20. When working with people who have a high level of technical skill and want to be left to manage their own jobs, the most effective leadership style would be a) permissive autocrat. b) directive autocrat. c) permissive democrat. d) directive democrat. Answer a Page 476 21. The two-dimensional model of subordinate participation shows that a) democratic leaders are more effective than autocratic leaders. b) permissive leaders are less effective than directive leaders. c) the directive permissive style is more effective than the directive autocratic style. d) the effectiveness of each leadership style depends on the existing conditions. Answer d Page 477 22. A leader with low concern for both production and people is said to have a (n) _____ management style. a) counterproductive b) middle-of-the-road c) impoverished d) apathetic Answer c Page 479 23. The University of Michigan and Ohio State studies of leadership in the 1950s developed leadership theories around the two dimensions of a) autocratic and permissive behavior. b) traits and personality. c) personalized leadership motivation and socialized leadership motivation. d) initiating structure and consideration. Answer d Page 477 24. The leadership dimensions of consideration and initiating structure seem to be a) exclusionary, high in one means low in the other. b) complementary, in that they work in combination. c) independent, they have little if an effect on each other. d) dependent, a leader can’t be high in one without being high in the other. Answer c Page 477 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 218 Part 5 - Influencing Others 25. The major benefits of high consideration leadership styles are a) enhanced employee performance. b) improved group atmosphere and morale c) decisive leadership and clear direction. d) All of the above. Answer b Page 477-478 A tool for developing a leader’s concern for production and the concern for people is a) leadership motivation training. b) influence style training. c) attribution approach training. d) grid training. Answer d Page 478 26. 27. In terms of the managerial grid, a manager who is high in concern for production and low in concern for people is said to have a/an ____ management style. a) task b) impoverished c) middle-of-the-road d) country club Answer a Page 478 28. A high concern for people and a low concern for production is a ___ management style. a) country club b) team c) middle-of-the-road d) task Answer a Page 479 29. Management grid training involves training a) in how to reduce group conflict. b) to improve manager’s communication and planning skills. c) to help identify to what degree the organization is meeting its strategic goals. d) to do all of these. Answer d Page 479 30. ____ suggests that leaders form different kinds of relationships with various groups of subordinates. a) Attribution theory b) Contingency theory c) Leader-member exchange theory d) Grid management theory Answer c Page 480 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 219 31. Leader-member exchange theory a) is largely unsupported by research. b) suggests that it is the circumstances of the task and the competency of the member that shapes leadership behavior. c) suggests that task/production focus is most important in terms of effective leadership. d) argues that the relationship between leaders and followers influences leadership behavior. Answer d Page 480 32. Bert is a manager for a small firm that was recently acquired by a larger company. In recent performance evaluations, employees from his previous firm were given higher ratings than employees from the new firm. Which leadership theory best explains why this occurred? a) Attribution theory b) Contingency theory c) Leader-member exchange theory d) Grid management theory Answer c Page 480 33. Traditional work groups and teams are the same in that a) both involve one-on-one management. b) both work at preventing conflict between individuals. c) both involve reactively responding to change. d) focus on training. Answer d Page 482 34. Kathleen is a first-line supervisor new to self-managed teams. In adapting her leadership to a team setting, Kathleen should a) focus on one-on-one relationships. b) spend her time training the team. c) concentrate on expanding the teams' capabilities. d) directing them toward their goals. Answer c Page 482 35. One way leaders need to adjust their leadership style when working with teams is to move to a) a heavy emphasis on training. b) make the most of differences rather than just inhibit conflict. c) provide more direction and less inspiration. d) a more reactive mode, responding to problems rather than trying to foresee them. Answer b Page 482 36. Effective team leaders a) foresee and influence change. b) build one-on-one relationships. c) minimize team conflict. d) focus on training. Answer a Page 482 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 220 Part 5 - Influencing Others 37. In traditional work groups, leaders a) tell people what to do. b) take all the credit. c) relate to others individually. d) All of the above. Answer a Page 482 Figure 13.3 38. A leadership approach based on turning the traditional management hierarchy upside down and empowering people to make their own decisions is called a) grassroots leadership. b) flat line leadership. c) autocratic-delegation. d) attribution leadership. Answer a Page 483 39. _____ emphasizes the role of leaders' causal explanations of followers' behavior. a) Attribution approach b) Leader-member exchange theory c) Contingency theory d) Grid management theory Answer a Page 484 40. If a leader makes an internal attribution for an employee's poor performance, what will the leader focus on to assist the employee? a) Upgrading work facilities. b) Improving employee skills. c) Motivating coworkers. d) Increasing the employee’s pay. Answer b Page 484 41. The tendency of followers to rally around the leaders in times of crisis is known as a) the association attribution effect. b) the charisma effect. c) the rally around the flag effect. d) the grass root effect. Answer c Page 484 42. When a leader is described as having something special, seemingly has the ability to bring about profound changes in others’ beliefs, perceptions, etc., this leader is described as a) a team management leader. b) a transformational leader. c) a charismatic leader. d) a leader with high initiating structure. Answer c Page 486 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 221 43. Charismatic leaders are differentiated from noncharismatic leaders by several factors including a) a vision. b) honesty and integrity. c) a strong desire to achieve. d) All of these. Answer a Page 486 44. Charismatic leaders are different from other leaders by virtue of a) the traits they possess. b) their ability to balance task and people issues. c) their level of delegation and direction. d) their relationship with their followers. Answer d Page 486 45. Charismatic leadership a) is an appropriate leadership style for any circumstance. b) tends to polarize followers. c) carries with it the assumption of virtue. d) tends to undermine job satisfaction while increasing employee commitment. Answer b Page 488 46. The fundamental difference between charismatic and transformational leaders is that only charismatic leaders have a clear vision. charismatic leaders are universally accepted, whereas transformational leaders are not. transformational leaders are more intelligent. charisma is insufficient to cause change by itself, transformational leadership brings about change, by definition. Answer d Page 488 a) b) c) d) 47. When a transformational leader gives the followers support, encouragement, and attention they need to perform their jobs well, he/she is providing a) individualized consideration. b) inspirational motivation. c) intellectual stimulation. d) initiating structure. Answer a Page 488 48. Scientists can measure transformation leadership abilities with the a) Myers-Briggs Multiphasic Personality Test. b) California Personality Inventory. c) Multifactor Leadership Questionnaire. d) Managerial Grid Questionnaire. Answer c Page 489 49. To become a transformation leader one needs to a) build group confidence by pointing out small accomplishes toward the goal. b) use a more permissive and participative management style. c) discover the shortest decision path in problem solving with the group. d) set and delegate clear attainable goals to self-managed work teams. Answer a Page 490 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 222 Part 5 - Influencing Others 50. The basis of LPC contingency theory is a) the follower’s level of maturity and enthusiasm for the task called task and relationship orientations.. b) the leader’s tendency to evaluate the person, favorably or unfavorably, with whom they find it most difficult to work. c) the degree of control or permissiveness the leader exhibits. d) the characteristics of the leader. Answer b Page 491 51. People who score low in LPC tend to a) perceive someone with whom they do not want to work in positive terms. b) be relationship-oriented. c) be primarily interested in attaining success at the task. d) be none of the above. Answer c Page 491 52. According to LPC contingency theory of leadership which type of leader will be most effective is determined by a) the leader’s relationship with his/her followers. b) the personality of the leader. c) whether the leader is dealing with teams or individuals. d) the degree of permissiveness or direction the leader is comfortable with. Answer a Page 491 53. Low LPC leaders tend to be most effective when situational control is a) high. b) moderate. c) very low. d) either very high or very low. Answer a Page 491 54. High LPC leaders tend to be most effective when situational control is a) high. b) moderate. c) very low. d) either very high or very low. Answer b Page 491 55. A high LPC leader would do best in which situations? a) As crew chief of a pit crew in a stock car race. b) Working with a road crew laying pavement. c) Leading a R & D team finding a cure for cancer. d) Leading a shop class through the process of car body repair. Answer c Page 492 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 223 56. ______ focuses on the ways of changing situational control variables when it is impractical to change leaders. a) The LMX approach b) Leader match c) The multifactor Leadership Questionnaire d) Situational leadership Answer b Page 492 57. ___ suggests that effective leaders are able to adjust their styles to accommodate their followers according to their need for direction and their need for emotional support. a) LMX theory b) Attribution theory c) Situational leadership theory d) Normative leadership theory Answer c Page 493 58. If followers are willing to do the job, but don't know how to it, which style of leadership is best? a) delegating b) selling c) telling d) participating Answer c Page 493 59. If followers are neither willing nor able to do the job, which style of leadership is needed? a) delegating b) selling c) tellling d) participating Answer b Page 493 60. When followers need little guidance or emotional support, the best situational leadership style is a) delegating. b) selling. c) telling. d) participating. Answer a Page 494 61. According to situational leadership theory, leaders must be able to a) set appropriate goals and inspire others to attain them.. b) control valued rewards and believable punishments. c) diagnosis a situation and identify the appropriate behavioral response. d) choose the proper strategy for decision making. Answer c Page 494 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 224 Part 5 - Influencing Others 62. The central premise to path-goal theory is that a) subordinates react favorably to a leader who helps them progress toward desired outcomes. b) leaders need to be able to assess where followers are and provide the necessary guidance and emotional support. c) leaders deal with followers based on what they believe is motivating follower behavior. d) followers should be permitted to find their own way. Answer a Page 494 63. In goal-path theory, the determinants of which leadership style is best include a) the strengths and skills of the leader. b) the characteristics of the follower. c) the level of control present in the situation. d) none of these. Answer b Page 495 64. In path-goal theory, if the leader is setting challenging goals and seeking performance improvement, he/she is using the ___ style. a) instrumental b) supportive c) participative d) achievement-oriented Answer d Page 495 65. The question of how much participation in decision-making leaders should allow is addressed by which of the following theories of leadership? a) Leader-member exchange theory b) Contingency theory c) Normative theory d) Path-goal theory Answer c Page 496 66. The best leadership style in the normative model of leadership is based on a) the quality of the decision and its acceptance. b) the characteristics of the follower. c) the level of control present in the situation. d) the degree of control the follower has over the process. Answer a Page 498 67. Normative decision making theory has the leader making decisions by asking a series of questions which relate to the a) the time available and the resources to be used. b) quality and acceptance of the decision. c) characteristics of the subordinates. d) personality of the leader. Answer b Page 498 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 225 68. The ____ is designed to protect decision acceptance in normative leadership theory. a) leader information rule b) unstructured problem rule c) goal congruence rule d) fairness rule Answer d Page 498, Table 13.7 69. A leader needs a high quality decision. She does not have sufficient information to make the decision alone. The problem is not structured. Acceptance by subordinates is crucial. If the leader makes the decision alone, it may not be accepted but subordinates do not share organizational goals. Finally, conflict among subordinates is likely to result from the decision. Under these circumstances, which type of decision-making approach is best, according to the normative theory of leadership? a) Group decision b) Consultative c) Autocratic d) Directive Answer a Page 499, Figure 13.15 70. The substitutes for leadership framework argues that leadership may be irrelevant a) because there is no empirical research to support any leadership theory. b) when subordinates are highly professional and their work is intrinsically satisfying. c) because we have romanticized leadership as a concept and it doesn’t really exist. d) if people are placed in self-managing teams or other self-directed work forms. Answer b Page 500 71. Irvin works as a manager for a small consulting firm. He has been searching for an approach to leadership to use in training the other managers at the firm. He is interested in a model that takes subordinate participation into consideration yet pays attention to the climate within the company. Which model would you suggest he consult? a) The trait model b) The normative model c) The contingency model d) The path goal model Answer b Page 500 72. Research regarding the substitutes for leadership show that a) job performance and attitudes were more strongly associated with substitutes than with leadership itself. b) job performance and attitudes were more strongly associated with certain types of leadership than with substitutes for leadership. c) there is no merit in the substitutes concept, leadership made a definitive difference in almost every experiment. d) the influence of leadership was closely tied to organizational performance if not individual performance. Answer a Page 501 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 226 Part 5 - Influencing Others In an experiment where a fictitious company’s success was attributed to top-management, evaluators of the company’s profitability and risk a) rated profitability and risk lower than when success was attributed to the employees. b) rated both profitability and risk lower when success was attributed to top management. c) rated profitability higher and risk lower when success was attributed to the regulatory environment. d) rated profitability higher and risk lower than when success was attributed to any other cause. Answer d Page 501 73. 74. In China, Guanxi roughly refers to a) learning. b) interpersonal relationships. c) unacceptable negotiating tactics. d) the underground economy. Answer b Page 504 75. A technique of leadership development that involves custom-tailored, one-on-one learning aimed at improving an individual leader’s performance is called a) Guanxi. b) action learning. c) mentoring. d) executive coaching. Answer d Page 504 Mini-Case Questions Table 13.1 Tom leads a work team on the line at his manufacturing company. Tom works well with his team because he is willing to cooperate, he doesn’t try to dominate, and he develops coalitions within the team and has extensive networks with other people in the company for getting resources needed to accomplish their job. His crew consists of highly competent, technical professionals, who program the computers that run the equipment on the manufacturing line. Because of his excellent leadership skills Tom was given the responsibility to train a new team of technicians fresh from vo-tech school. Once he had them trained he would return to leading his regular team. Refer to Table 13.1. In terms of the two-dimensional model of subordinate participation, Tom’s most effective leadership style here would be a) directive autocrat. b) permissive democrat. c) permissive autocrat. d) directive democrat. Answer c Page 476 76. 77. a) b) c) d) Refer to Table 13.1. With the vo-tech group, the best leadership style would be directive autocrat. permissive democrat. permissive autocrat. directive democrat. Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations Answer a Page 227 476 78. Refer to Table 13.1. In terms of orientation to task or people, Tom seems to be a) high in initiating structure. b) high in personalized leadership motivation. c) low in consideration. d) high in consideration. Answer d Page 477 Table 13.2 In preparation for grid training, the managers of your company are having their current styles assessed. Elizabeth seems to have a high concern for production and a high concern for people. Bill on the other hand, has a low concern for both dimensions. Recently Elizabeth noticed that one of her employees was not doing well on the job. He was listless, late to work, and his work products were degenerating in quality. Elizabeth decided he had been working too hard and gave him a couple of days off. Bill was transferred to another department. He took three of his subordinates from his old department with him. After being there six months he gave all employees performance appraisals. The subordinates who came with him to the new department all did better than the more experienced people who had been on the job. In fact, the subordinates who came with Bill were having a hard time adjusting to the new department and had not been performing all that well. 79. Refer to Table 13.2. Elizabeth has a(n) ____ management style according to management grid theory. a) country club b) team c) impoverished d) middle-of-the-road Answer b Page 479 Refer to Table 13.2. Bill’s behavior is best explained by which leadership theory? a) Attribution theory b) Management grid c) Contingency theory d) Leader-member exchange model Answer d Page 480 80. Refer to Table 13.2. Elizabeth’s decision is best explained by which leadership theory? a) Attribution theory b) Management grid c) Contingency theory d) Leader-member exchange model Answer a Page 484 81. Table 13.3 As the President of his own company, Todd has provided his employees a vision and created a strong sense of mission. He has helped them recognize their problems and find ways to solve them while providing support, encouragement, and attention. He is developing a strong company through the development of strong employees. Within Todd’s company, his marketing VP is also able to enthuse his employees. He has them excited about what the marketing department can become. Employees constantly Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 228 Part 5 - Influencing Others come to the VP for guidance and instructions. He invests little time or money into their development, but they love working for him. Each time a new product comes to them to market he is able to build real enthusiasm for the process. Joan is a product manager who works for the VP of marketing. She encourages her product team to interact with customers and suppliers. She constantly tries to make things work better, even if they aren’t ‘broken.’ Refer to Table 13.3. The VP of marketing’s leadership style is most likely that of a a) charismatic leader. b) transformational leader. c) country club style of leader. d) contingency style leader. Answer a Page 486 82. Refer to Table 13.3. Joan’s behavior is an example of ___ by a team leader. a) expanding team capabilities b) creating a team identity c) building trust and inspiring teamwork d) making the most of team differences Answer c Page 482 83. 84. Refer to Table 13.3. Todd is an example of a a) charismatic leader. b) transformational leader. c) country club style of leader. d) contingency style leader. Answer b Page 488 Table 13.4 A professor is working with five teams in his marketing research class. He decides to experiment with path-goal theory in helping these groups accomplish their off-campus studies. Group A has done a project for him before. He gets them setting challenging goals and seeks to get them to produce an even better project this time. With Group B he provides very specific guidelines, sets deadlines, and lays out the rules of the class and project. He lets Group C manage their own task. He encourages them, works on building a strong rapport with them, and tries to meet their needs related to the project. By the time he gets to Group D, he discovers they’re already lost, confused, and a week behind everyone else. He sets a work schedule for them and provides step-by-step guidelines regarding the project so they won’t get confused or distracted again. 85. Refer to Table 13.4. With Group A, the professor is using a) an instrumental style. b) a supportive style. c) a participative style. d) an achievement-oriented style. Answer c Page 495 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 229 86. Refer to Table 13.4. With Group B, the professor is using a) an instrumental style. b) a supportive style. c) a participative style. d) an achievement-oriented style. Answer a Page 495 87. Refer to Table 13.4. With Group D, the professor is using a) an instrumental style. b) a supportive style. c) a participative style. d) an achievement-oriented style. Answer a Page 495 True/False Questions 88. The primary difference between a leader and a manager is in how they function within an organization. Answer T Page 472 89. The concept of the "great person" as an example of leadership is the basis for behavioral leadership theory. Answer F Page 473 90. When we describe leaders in terms of their desire to lead, their cognitive abilities, etc., we express a trait perspective of leadership. Answer T Page 473 91. In terms of participative versus autocratic leadership behaviors a boss who asks for your input, is open to ideas, and lets you perform your job your way is more of a delegator than an authocrat. Answer T Page 475 92. A manager who makes decisions without consulting subordinates and supervises their work closely is an example of a directive democrat style of leader. Answer F Page 475 93. The most applicable style of leadership (usable in the most settings) in terms of the managerial grid is the high concern with people and high concern with production. Answer T Page 479 94. Team leadership differs from individual leadership in that in team leadership the leader needs to focus more on training and directing than he/she would with an individual. Answer F Page 481 95. In teams, leaders should work at reducing conflict between individuals to promote cohesiveness. Answer F Page 482 96. In teams, it is important for leaders to relate to members on an individual level. Answer F Page 482 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 230 Part 5 - Influencing Others 97. The leadership theory based on what the leader thinks of follower behavior is attribution theory. Answer T Page 484 98. Charismatic and transformational leaders are both change-oriented styles of leadership. Answer T Page 485-486 99. Charismatic leaders give individual consideration, provide intellectual stimulation, and inspire action. Answer F Page 486-488 100. Unlike other forms of leadership charismatic leaders are always necessary and this style works well in almost every situation. Answer F Page 487 101. Transformational leaders will tend to strengthen and challenge their followers where as a charismatic leader will tend to keep them weak and dependent. Answer T Page 488 102. Benjamin Franklin would best be described as a pragmatic leader, as opposed to a charismatic leader. Answer T Page 488 103. The contingency leadership theory based on the leader's feelings for the least liked member of his/her group is the LPC model. Answer T Page 491 104. In LPC leadership theory the leader's relationship with group members, the structure of the task, and the leader's position power together determine the most effective way to lead. Answer T Page 491 105. Situational leadership adjusts the manager's leadership style based on the goals set by followers and what is needed to help them achieve those goals. Answer F Page 493 106. If Joan is primarily concerned with the decision-making processes of her subordinates and is working on choosing the most effective approach to making decisions she is using a path-goal style of leadership. Answer F Page 497 107. Peter is sharing a problem with his subordinates getting their input but making the decision himself. If we describe this behavior as consultative we are using a normative decision theory to describe Peter's leadership. Answer T Page 497 108. The more skilled and educated one's subordinates, the less leadership is needed. Answer T Page 500 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 231 109. Most people see leadership as more important and more closely linked to organizational performance than it actual is. Answer T Page 501 110. Executive coaching is a leadership development technique involving a continuous process of learning and reflection that is supported by colleagues and that emphasizes getting things done. Answer F Page 505-507 111. The first step in the executive coaching process is defining the nature of the coaching relationship (e.g. what will be done and how). Answer T Page 505 Essay Questions Major essay 112. Discuss leadership trait theory and it implications. Answer - Also called the great person theory, the idea was that leaders possessed key traits that made them leaders and that these traits were stable over time and across groups. One could study leaders at any time in history by looking for these traits. The theory was largely unsubstantiated by research until recently. Kirpatrick and Locke found a series of traits; drive, honesty, leadership motivation, self-confidence, cognitive ability, knowledge of the business, creativity, and flexibility, that did seem to mark people successful in business settings. Pages 472-473 113. Leadership behavior can be defined by several sets of terms. Discuss and the compare and contrast an autocratic/permissive perspective and then a people-oriented or production-oriented perspective on leadership behavior. Answer - When describing the behavior of leaders, one key variable involves how much influence they allow subordinates to have over decisions. There are two ways of describing these behaviors. The autocractic-delegation continuum model. On the one hand someone who wants to control everything-that is, someone who made every decision, told people precisely what to do, and wanted to run the entire show is autocratic. In contrast, someone who allows employees to make their own decisions? If so, this individual would be described as relying on delegation. Most people fall in between the extremes. The autocratic-delegation continuum model reasonably describes the role of leaders in organizational decision making, but it also is regarded as being overly simplistic. In fact, describing a leader's participation in decision making involves two separate dimensions. The two-dimensional model of subordinate participation. This model describes subordinates' participation in decisions regarding two dimensions. The autocratic-democratic dimension characterizes the extent to which leaders permit subordinates to take part in decisions. The permissive-directive dimension involves the extent to which leaders direct the activities of subordinates and tell them how to perform their jobs. These two variables yields the four possible patterns; the directive autocrat, the permissive autocrat, the directive democrat, and the permissive democrat. Person-oriented and production-oriented leaders A large body of research, much of it conducted during the 1950s at the University of Mickigan17 and Ohio State University suggests leaders differ greatly along these dimensions. Those at the high end of the first dimension, which is known as initiating structure (or production-oriented), mainly are concerned with production and primarilyfocus on getting the job done. They engage in actions such as organizing work, inducing subordinates to follow rules, setting goals, and making the leader and Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 232 Part 5 - Influencing Others subordinate roles explicit. In contrast, other leaders are lower on this dimension, and they show less tendency to engage in these actions. Leaders at the high end of the second dimension, which is known as consideration (or person-oriented), primarily focus on establishing good relations with their subordinates and on being liked by them. They engage in actions such as doing favors for subordinates, explaining things to them, and assuring their welfare. In contrast, other leaders are low on this dimension, and they do not really care how well they get along with subordinates. Pages 475-477 114. Compare and contrast leader-member exchange theory and the attribution approach to leadership. Answer - In leader-member exchange theory the leader tends to favor members of the ‘in-group’ with more resources, better evaluations, etc. Leaders distinguish between in-groups and out-groups early on with very little information. Attribution approach refers to the tendency for leaders to attribute causes to followers’ behavior and then to act on those attributions. Both models depend on the leader’s perception of the follower. Both deal with external behavior by the follower. LMX is favoritism or neglect based on prejudice. Attribution is judging causes and determining courses of action as a result. Pages 480-481 and 484-486 115. What makes a leader charismatic? What are the dangers of charismatic leadership? Answer - Charismatic leaders have the ability to affect profound change in people’s beliefs, attitudes, perceptions and actions, because of five key characteristics. 1) Self-confidence. They are highly confident of their ability and judgment. 2) Vision. They are able to propose a state of affairs that is an improvement on current conditions and to help others understand it. 3) Extraordinary behavior. They are unconventional and will often elicit admiration. 4) Recognized as change agents. They are able to make things happen and people recognize that. 5) Environmentally sensitivity. They are highly realistic, they can read the politics of a situation and adapt to it. They know what they can and can’t do. Dangers: Charismatic leaders can have a dark side, they can exploit their followers. They do not tend to develop their followers so their followers can become dependent on them. Pages 486-487 116. Outline contingency theories of leadership. Answer - There are four main theories; LPC contingency theory, situational leadership, path-goal theory, and normative decision theory. LPC contingency theory comes from Fiedler. He postulates that a leader’s contribution to the successful performance of his/her team is determined by his/her tendency to evaluate in a favorable or unfavorable way the person whom he/she finds it most difficult to work (Least preferred co-worker). See Figure 13-11, page 492. Situational leadership argues that a leader should adjust his/her style to meet the maturity of the worker. The leader balances task behavior and relationship behavior, depending on the willingness and ability of the worker to perform a given task. See Figure 13-13, page 494. Path-goal theory sees the leader’s task as helping employees accomplish their goals. The more he/she helps, the more favorable impression workers have of the leader. There are four styles that vary from high direction to achievement orientation; instrumental, supportive, participative, and achievement-oriented. See Figure 13.14, Page 496. Normative decision theory is a decision process for determining how much participation subordinates should have in a decision. It is used when the quality and acceptance of the decision are very important. See Table 13.15, page 499. Pages 490-501 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved Chapter 13 Leadership in Organizations 233 Short essay 117. What is leadership? Answer - Leadership is the process whereby one individual influences group members toward attaining-defined group or organizational goals. See Figure 13.1 for a summary of the leadership process. Leadership involves noncoercive influence. Leadership primarily involves influence--that is, a leader changes the actions or attitudes of several group members or subordinates. In general, leadership refers to the use of noncoercive techniques. Leadership influence is goal-directed. It involves the exercise of influence for a purpose--that is, to attain defined group or organizational goals. Leadership requires followers. It is a two-way street. Leaders influence subordinates in various ways, but leaders also are influenced by their subordinates. In fact, it may be said that leadership exists only in relation to followers. Pages 471 118. How does leadership in self-managed teams work? How is it different from leadership in other contexts? Answer - When most people think of leaders, they think of individuals who make strategic decisions on behalf of followers, who then are responsible for carrying them these decisions. Due to the move to self-managed teams, in this context, team leaders may be called on to provide special resources to groups that are empowered to implement their own missions in their own ways. Some guidelines: Instead of directing people, team leaders build trust and inspire teamwork. Rather than focusing simply on training individuals, team leaders concentrate on expanding team capabilities. Instead of managing one-on-one, team leaders create a team identity. Traditional leaders worked at preventing conflict between individuals, but team leaders make the most of team differences. Unlike traditional leaders who simply react to change, team leaders should foresee and influence change. Leading teams is very different from leading individuals in the traditional directive- or even participative - manner. The special nature of teams makes the leader's job very different. Page 481-483 119. Compare and contrast a charismatic leader with a transformational leader. Answer - First, they have a number of similarities; vision, change agents, sensitive to the environment in which they work, etc. The key difference is that transformational leaders bring about change and develop their people. Charismatic leaders enthuse but that’s insufficient for real change, and they may leave their followers dependent on them. Charismatic leadership is subject to abuse and the domination of followers. By definition transformational leadership is not. Pages 486-489 120. What are the distinctives of situational leadership that makes it different from other contingency theories? Answer - Situational leadership theory also is considered to be a contingency theory, because it focuses on the best leadership style for a given situation. Hersey and Blanchard, the scientists who developed this approach, argue that leaders are effective when they select the right leadership style for the situation they face. Specifically, this depends on the maturity of the followers--that is, on their readiness to take responsibility for their own behavior. This is based on two variables with which we already are familiar: task behavior, or the degree to which followers have the appropriate job knowledge and skills (i.e., their need for guidance and direction); and relationship behavior, or the degree to which followers are willing to work without taking direction from others (i.e., their need for emotional support). According to this situational leadership theory, leaders must diagnose the Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved 234 Part 5 - Influencing Others situations they face, identify the appropriate behavioral style, and then implement that response. Because situations may change, leaders must constantly reassess them, paying special attention to their followers' needs for guidance and emotional support. To the extent they do so, these leaders are likely to be effective. See Figure 13.13, page 494. Pages 493-494 121. What is normative decision theory and when would you use it? Answer - It is a decision process for determining how much participation subordinates should have in a decision. It is used when the quality and acceptance of the decision are very important. Pages 495-500 122. What makes leaders superfluous? Answer - 1) When you have highly knowledgeable, committed, and experienced employees. 2) When the job is structured so that direction is redundant. 3) When the organizational environment makes leadership unnecessary. Pages 500-502 Copyright © Prentice Hall. All Rights Reserved