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Transcontinental Project Janet Balcom Katrina Morgan February 27, 2011 Winter Quarter 2011. The Force. The Budget Crisis/Economy. The Force IN THE SYSTEM……. The budget crisis/economy impact in school systems and city governments. Factors from Path-Goal Theory and the Interactional Framework.
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Transcontinental ProjectJanet BalcomKatrina MorganFebruary 27, 2011Winter Quarter 2011
The Force The Budget Crisis/Economy
The Force IN THE SYSTEM…….. The budget crisis/economy impact in school systems and city governments
Factors from Path-Goal Theory and the Interactional Framework
The Force IN THE SYSTEM……..continued • For the past four+ years the United States has been in a budget crisis. • We have been teetering on the verge of a recession. Although, there are some who argue that we were in a recession and are just now coming out of it. • Many areas of society have been impacted by this budget crisis. However, school systems and city and county governments have been hit extremely hard.
Significant budget issues facing school districts • Increased class size • Shorten school year and shorter school day • Shortage of books and materials • Furloughs • Early retirement plans
Significant budget issues facing SCHOOL districts…continued • Layoffs – classified, certificated, management • Lack of building maintenance • Reduced or eliminated services such as after school programs, summer school, counseling, transportation, music, art and library programs
Significant budget issues facing city government • Furloughs • Layoffs • Reduced city services such as parks, trash collection, libraries, police, fire • Reduction in employer benefit contributions
Significant budget issues facing city government…..CONTINUED • Reduction in employer retirement contributions • Reduction of pay (5%-10%) • Cuts in State Grants for projects • Elimination of Redevelopment Funding
How the force - budget – impacts the…. Leader Followers Situation
Leader - considerations • Honest understanding of who you are, what you know and what you can do. • Followers determine if the leader is successful. • Have to convince your followers, not yourself or your superiors, that you are worthy of being followed • Personality of the leader • How he/she achieved leader status • Experience in the organization • What kind of support the leader has (school board member or city council)
Follower - considerations • Different people require different styles of leadership • Lack of motivation requires a different approach than a high degree of motivation • Share the leader’s goals & values • Intrinsically rewarded for performing well • Trust in the leader • Confidence that the leader is interested in their well being
Situation - considerations • Your relationship with your seniors, the skill of your followers, the informal leaders within your organization, and how your organization is organized. • Most ambiguous aspect of the leadership framework • Culture of the organization • All situations are different. What you do in one situation will not always work in another.
Situation – considerations….continued Use judgment to decide the best course of action and the leadership style needed for each situation The situation normally has a greater effect on a leader's action than his or her traits. This is because while traits may have an impressive stability over a period of time, they have little consistency across situations (Mischel, 1968).
Five Different Decision Procedures (Vroom and Yetton) • Leader takes known information and then decides alone. • Leader gets information from followers, and then decides alone. • Leader shares problem with followers individually, listens to ideas and then decides alone. • Leader shares problems with followers as a group, listens to ideas and then decides alone. • Leader shares problems with followers as a group and then seeks and accepts consensus agreement.
Leader • Spells out the responsibilities of the individual groups • Department heads – cuts • Unions – layoffs, furloughs • School Board – overall cuts; impact of cuts • City Council – overall cuts; impact of cuts
Leader…..continued • Guides the process • Keep sight of the impact & importance of the task • Maintains the expertise • Encourages/listens • Maintain transparency • Depend on the readiness of followers • Supportive
Leader…..continued • Directive • Reduce roadblocks & pitfalls • Figure out how the maneuver through the situation with minimal impact or disruption to the organization • Maintains control • Communicates relevant information as soon as possible to followers
Follower • Willingness to work with the leader regarding impact of cuts • Trust in the leader and in the process • Willing to see beyond themselves • May share the leaders goals
Follower…..continued • Expectations of union leaders • Motivation • Level of competence – higher level followers may have more impact on the situation than lower level followers
Situation • Leadership only makes sense in the context of the situation • The more control a leader has over followers, the more favorable the situation is…at least from a leader’s perspective • Three sub-elements in situation favorability: • Leader-member relations • Task structure • Position power
Leader’s decision • Consider quality of the decision • Acceptance of decision by followers • Deep Cut at one time or small cuts over a specified period of time • Give the directive with no input
Leaders decision….. continued • Allow follower input prior to making the decision • Target specified groups that will be impacted • Target all groups - all carry a piece of the burden (% of reduction across the board)
Concluding thoughts • The only situations consideration is knowledge of the task, and the only follower factor is readiness. • Situational leadership is appealing because of its commonsense approach as well as its ease of understanding.
Concluding thoughts…Continued • Situational leadership is a tool to get leaders to think about how leadership effectiveness may depend somewhat on being flexible with different followers.