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Fact and Fiction: The Changing Nature of Leadership Myths About Leadership Truths About Leadership The myths about leadership The truths about leadership we date back to the turn of the 20th propose are based on our collective century when leadership was first research and years of study and formally studied by psychologists and teaching, and on our own experiences sociologists. In ancient Greece, only as leaders. We propose the men with potbellies were thought to following: be great leaders. In Celtic lands, birds were thought to confer 1. Leaders are made, not born. leadership powers. Historically, some Many people have the capacity believe that only people with to lead an organization, charismatic personalities make community, family, profession, powerful leaders. The myths of and, most important, leadership include: themselves. Some individuals will not describe themselves as • Leaders are born, not made. leaders based on traditional • Leadership is hierarchical, and notions of formal leadership you need to hold a formal when, in fact, they do make a position (have status and difference in their organization power) to be considered a through their commitment, leader. values, and actions toward • You have to have charisma to change. Leaders are not born be an effective leader. with innate characteristics or • There is one standard way of skills predisposing them to be leading. leaders (Gardner, 1990). A • It is impossible to be a person's environment can manager and a leader at the influence the development of same time. leadership skills and interests • You only need to have (Hughes, Ginnett, & Curphy, common sense to be an 1993; Komives, Owen, effective leader. Longerbeam, Mainella, & Osteen, 2005). Excerpted from Komives, S.R., Lucas, N., & McMahon, T.R. (2013). The Changing Nature of http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/posting.php?ID=1304 2. In today's fluid organizations, charismatic. For every positive leadership occurs at all levels. example of a charismatic Progressive organizations are leader, we can find a negative striving to flatten their charismatic. For example, hierarchies to empower people Martin Luther King Jr. is throughout the organization to described positively as a participate in the leadership charismatic leader who process. Manz and Sim's organized a nation to fight for (1989) self-managing teams civil rights for all its citizens, concept is an example of whereas Adolph Hitler is people at the "worker-level" viewed negatively as an being responsible for high- example of a charismatic level decision making and leader who influenced a nation behavioral control over an to senselessly and unmercifully organization's process and kill millions of people because outcomes. People find of their race, religion, sexual meaning in their orientation, or disability. organizational life and work through shared experiences 4. There is not one identifiable and a feeling of being right way to lead an empowered to make a organization or group. On an contribution or difference. individual level, a person's leadership approach or style 3. Having a charismatic might be influenced by his or personality is not a her sex, cultural identity, or prerequisite for leadership. A personal value system. On an charismatic leader is one who organizational level, the has "profound and unusual context of the setting might effects on followers" (Yukl, determine the type of 1994, p. 318). Charismatic leadership required to be leaders are often described as effective. Leading volunteer visionaries who have a strong civilian organizations calls for desire for power; leaders have a very different leadership been called impression approach than does leading a managers who have a keen for-profit organization. ability to motivate others and set an example for others to follow (Yukl, 1994). However, many effective and accomplished leaders are not described as Excerpted from Komives, S.R., Lucas, N., & McMahon, T.R. (2013). The Changing Nature of http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/posting.php?ID=1304 5. Some leaders and scholars associated with both processes believe it is important to make (Gardnre, 1990). It behoves a distinction between the leaders who also perform processes of management and managerial tasks such as leadership (Bennis & Nanus, resource allocation and 1985; Gardner, 1990; organizing systems to be Zaleznik, 1977). Gardner goes effective managers and to to great lengths to describe the perform those functions differences between the well. It is possible, and in functions of managers and some cases desirable, for a leaders. He defines a manager person to be an effective leader as "the individual so labelled while being an effective [who] holds a directive post in manager. The functions of an organization, presiding over both leadership and the processes by which the management, if they can be organization functions, distinguished, are necessary in allocating resources prudently, organizations. Most and making the best possible important is the ability to use of people" (p. 3). The discern when and how to manager is closely bound to an facilitate management and organization or institution, administrative functions in the whereas a leader may not have leadership process and who an organization at has the best strengths to all. Florence Nightingale is an execute those tasks. example of such a leader. Yet others find the exercise of 6. Leadership is a discipline that determining the differences is teachable (Gardner, 1990; between leadership and Parks, 2005). Any participant management to have little with a desire to lead or to utility and use the terms assume leadership interchangeably (Yukl, 1994). responsibilities can be taught certain skills and Another proposition is that processes. Leadership is not managers are preoccupied with just common sense. Catherine doing things the right way, the Great, John F. Kennedy, whereas leaders focus on doing Sitting Bull, and Harriet the right thing (Zaleznik, Tubman did not rise to 1977). There are distinctions greatness between management and serendipitously. They had a leadership, and there is also mission or purpose and they overlap in the functions all experienced life events that Excerpted from Komives, S.R., Lucas, N., & McMahon, T.R. (2013). The Changing Nature of http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/posting.php?ID=1304 shaped their values and might have started early in sharpened their elementary school as the lead skills. Learning about in your sixth-grade play, or it leadership and developing as a may have begun later in your leader is a lifelong process career when you become an involving preparation, elected official or community experience, trial-and-error, activist at the age of fifty. self-examination, and a willingness to learn from mistakes and successes. Your own leadership development References Bennis, W.G., & Thomas, R.J. (2002). Geeks and Geezers: How Era, Values, and Defining Moments Shape Leaders. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press. Gardner, J.W. (1990). On Leadership. New York, NY: Free Press. Hughes, R. L., Ginnett, R.C., & Curphy, G.J. (1993). Leadership: Enhancing the Lessons of Experience. Homewood, IL: Richard D. Irwin. Komives, S.R., Owen, J.E., Longerbeam, S., Mainella, F.C., & Osteen, L. (2005). “Developing a Leadership Identity: A Grounded Theory.” Journal of College Student Development, 46, 593-611. Manz, C.C., & Sims J., H.P. (1989). SuperLeadership: Leading Others to Lead Themselves. New York, NY: Berkley Books. Parks, S.D. (2005). Leadership Can Be Taught: A Bold Approach for a Complex World. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press. Excerpted from Komives, S.R., Lucas, N., & McMahon, T.R. (2013). The Changing Nature of http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/posting.php?ID=1304
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