300 likes | 839 Views
Managing, Leading, and Following Chapter 1. The Context. Managing Leading Following. Managing. The act of any individual who guides others through a series of routines, procedures, or practice guidelines. Leading.
E N D
The Context • Managing • Leading • Following
Managing The act of any individual who guides others through a series of routines, procedures, or practice guidelines.
Leading Using individual traits and personal power to interact constructively to resolve problems.
Following A complementary set of actions that contributes to problem-solving, task attainment, and evaluation with use of health and assertive behaviors to support those who are leading or managing.
Emotional Intelligence Possession of social skills, interpersonal competence, psychological maturity, and emotional awareness devoted to helping people work well together.
The Five Domains of Emotional Intelligence • Having self-awareness • Managing emotions • Motivating self • Being empathetic • Handling relationships
Theoretical Basis • Leadership • Motivation
Leadership Theories • Trait • Style • Situational-Contingency • Transformational
Leadership Theories • Trait Theories
Leadership Theories • Style Theories
Leadership Theories • Situational-Contingency Theories
Leadership Theories • Transformational Theories
Motivational Theories • Hierarchy of Needs • Two-Factor • Expectancy • OB Modification
Motivational Theories • Hierarchy of Needs
Motivational Theories • Two-Factor
Motivational Theories • Expectancy Theory
Motivational Theories • OB Modification
Complexity Theory • Complexity science promotes the idea that the world is full of systems that interact and adapt through relationships. • Nurses must be flexible and dynamic to be in tune with the ever-changing systems of people, health care, public policy, and human relationships.
Complexity Theory • Marion and Uhl-Bien suggest five ways that complexity science encourages leading, managing, and following.
The Five Ways • Develop networks. • Encourage nonhierarchical, “bottom-up” interaction among workers. • Become a leadership “tag.”
The Five Ways (cont.) • Focus on emergence. • Think systematically.
Conclusion Managing Leading Following