Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan K
Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan K
Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan K
Kailinda Moreno
CCHE 600
August 6, 2019
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
I have found Professor Guerriero’s description of leadership to be the most concise and
practical definition of leadership. It reads, “Leadership is the process of moving people in the
direction of the organization’s vision” (Guerriero, 2019. Unit 1. p.3). The timing for this course
on leadership is impeccable because in late July of this year I began supervising two front desk
supervisor and this summer course on leadership has helped prepare me for leading my first team
in higher education.
While I recognize the role of a leader in higher education is dynamic and encompasses
more than working with people, the driving force for my philosophy will be relationship
team management, a situational approach to leadership, and the theory of authentic leadership.
(Guerriero, 2019. Unit 1; Guerriero, 2019. Unit 2). I completed my undergraduate degree in
psychology because I have an innate draw and interest in human relationships and behaviors,
which has been influential in my ideas on leadership. By completing the questionnaires provided
by the instructor I found that I have both strengths and areas of development in the approach and
research on leadership styles and supporting my team to the best of my ability. However, I feel
the theory and approaches of leadership I’ve outlined best fit the role I am in now.
During my interview with Mako Ushihara, the Assistant Director of Graduate Housing at
Stanford University, I found myself aligning with his team orientated leadership style. As a
member of Mako’s team in housing I greatly appreciate that my task strengths are recognized.
For example, I am the go-to person when event flyers need to made or building wide notices
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
need to be drafted. When Mako or another supervisor trusts me to complete tasks outside of my
general work duties this makes me feel like a valued member of the department and helps foster
positive work relationships. Blake and Mouton’s Leadership Grid (as cited in Guerriero, 2019.
Unit 1. p.15-17) helps explain a leaders levels of concern for tasks and relationships. Upon
examination of the grid I feel Mako along with other leaders in my department exhibit a team
management behavioral approach. This approach is defined as an ideal behavioral approach for
leaders because it encompasses high concern for both relationships and tasks (Guerriero, 2019.
Unit 1. p.17). This is an approach that I want to use with my new team. Practicing the team
management approach will help me to develop a high performing team because the balance of
people and production will mean that my followers will have a work environment where their
leadership philosophy, I must also consider that my staff may need me to adjust my leadership
approach based on their varying levels of development. This is why I find the situational
leadership according to Hersey and Blanchard (as cited in Guerriero, 2019. Unit 2. p.1) is
essentially when different levels of competence and commitment from followers requires
specific support and directive from the leader. Therefore, different situations require different
types of leadership styles. Hersey and Blanchard developed four leadership styles, which
correspond with four development levels. The styles they outlined move from directing, to
coaching, to supporting, and finally to delegating (Guerriero, 2019. Unit 2. p.3). I believe
incorporating these outlined styles can help me to support my staff during their different levels of
development. When a leadership style does not properly correspond with the right level of
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
development this can create gaps. An example of this can be seen in Hui Zhang’s (2014) case
study on leadership styles at vocational colleges in China. Zhang suggests that when a leader
does not provide the appropriate leadership style there can be a lapse in development and that
leaders should not use a “one size fits all” approach to leadership (Zhang, 2014. p.30).
character traits and behaviors of a leader (Guerriero, 2019. Unit 1. p.18). I think it is much easier
behaviors. I am in the early stages of becoming a leader in higher education and as I build my
philosophy on leadership I want to ensure that I can “practice what I preach”. I think that starts
Northouse (as cited in Guerriero, 2019. Unit 1. p.18) as identifying strengths and weakness as a
leader, being as transparent as possible with staff, being open and objective when making
decisions, and strongly following one’s moral compass. Using this theory to lead my team will
show them that I can be trusted and have good intentions as a leader.
When I step back and review the basis of my personal leadership philosophy on team
management, situational leadership, and the theory of authentic leadership I need to question
why. The answer I have come up with is these approaches allow for a strong foundation for me
to grow on. It is my opinion that other approaches to leadership, such as Adaptive Leadership
and Transformational Leadership, take a great amount of experience working in higher education
to develop.
Heifetz and Laurie (as cited in Guerriero, 2019, Unit 3, p.8) define adaptive leaders to be
people who can inspire organizational change during times of great complex challenges with no
simple solutions. Northouse (as cited in Guerriero, 2019, Unit 3, p.8) defines transformational
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
leaders as individuals who are visionaries, they have the capacity to charismatically inspire
followers to achieve optimal performance and bring about positive change to an organization. I
want to be intentional and practical as a new leader. I agree that the styles of adaptive and
transformational leadership are positive approaches, however they are long term goals to my
leadership style and do not best serve me now. In the hierarchy of the university I work for now,
I am quite low on the totem pole. While I believe great change can certainly develop at local
levels, this is not my directive. My responsibility is to lead my new team to complete the high
volume of tasks we have now, developing positive work relationships with them, and to provide
the necessary support and training they require as newly employed staff with great integrity.
practicing the team management approach. By completing the leadership behavior questionnaire
provided by the instructor I discovered that I rate moderately high in relationship behaviors
(score of 39/50) and moderately low in task behaviors (score of 33/50) (Guerriero, 2019. Unit 1.
p.32). These results are not shocking, as I’m very aware that fostering task behaviors is an area
of development for me. In order to illicit more positive task behaviors I need to begin by
providing my staff with clear criteria for task expectations. I’ve noticed that I’ll verbally or
through email ask my staff to complete a task, but do not provide a hard deadline or more
individualized document for each of my staff members that outlines the next three months of
work they need to complete. Once I have finalized the proposed document I am going to meet
with my staff members individually to go over the document and to allow them time to add
suggestions or ask for clarity. This is merely a starting point to support an increase in task
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
completion, but I think this will create an open dialogue on the importance of maintaining a
On the scale of leadership styles in the situational approach I rate very high in coaching
and rate lowest in delegating (Guerriero, 2019. Unit 2. p.19). I believe there are two main
contributing factors in these results. The first is I am a brand new supervisor and have only been
leading a two person team for about two weeks. The second is delegating tasks is a known area
of opportunity for me. At this stage of developing my team I am more comfortable being very
involved in their day to day tasks and providing as much support as I can. That being said, my
staff is most likely at the S1 level of supportive behavior. They are brand new to my institution
and lack the skills and competencies to accomplish goals, but have a high commitment level
(Guerriero, 2019. Unit 2. p.4). To appropriately practice situational leadership I need to apply the
D1 style of Directing, meaning I need to communicate the importance of goals and provide clear
instructions on tasks to my team and back off on high support (Guerriero, 2019. Unit 2. p.4). To
complete this I am going to provide the aforementioned document for goals and task criteria and
allow my staff time to run with the directions I’ve given them. I am also going to back off on my
more areas of “opportunity for improvement” then I had anticipated. I rated high in relational
transparency and low in self-awareness, internalized moral perspective, and balanced processing
(Guerriero, 2019. Unit 1. p.34). As a millennial I often here my peers talk about vibes and
energies. When we feel a person or leader is being genuine with their intentions we might say
that that person gives us good vibes. When we feel someone is communicating with ill intentions
we might say they have a bad energy or vibe. It is my hope to bring a positive energy to my
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
current and future roles. I want to be as transparent as possible and have obvious good intentions
with my language and actions toward my current team and future teams. Taking this course and
completing this assignment on developing my philosophy has been the first step for me to
become an authentic leader. Really digging deep and asking myself, “What kind of leader do you
want to be?” has truthfully been challenging. However, outlining my intentions for my view on
leadership has helped me to reflect on the importance of self-awareness and is something I need
to continue doing for as long as I plan to work in higher education. By continuing my education
and continuing to work in higher education I think I will be able to learn more about myself and
my intentions as a leader.
responsibility to create a climate of valued staff by honoring diversity and actively practicing
diverse backgrounds into the culture and work of an organization using informal and formal
efforts (Guerriero, 2019, Unit 4, p.2). While diversity can be generally defined as the levels of
differences that exist among people (Guerriero, 2019, Unit 4, p.2). This summer I took an
overview course on American community colleges and something that really resonated with me
was that the genesis of community colleges was inclusion. These intuitions were created to
enable people of diverse backgrounds to have access to education. The mission statements of
higher education institutions now almost always include a blurb on the importance of diverse
student populations. The idea of inclusion should also be true of faculty and staff that support
students.
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
In the next few weeks I have the opportunity to be on an interview panel that is searching
for an additional supervisor for the area of graduate housing that I oversee. I am currently
fulfilling the duties of two supervisors, so I am very excited to no longer be short staffed.
bias can be present without intent (Guerriero, 2019, Unit 4, p.2). I attended a training put on by
our human resources department about two months ago specifically on unconscious bias and the
trainer shared with us a great example of identifying unconscious bias that really resonated with
me. She told us a quick story about a boy and his father driving down the road. The boy and his
father get into a car accident and the boy gets rushed to the hospital and when he is on the
operating table, the surgeon exclaims, “That’s my son!” The trainer then asked the group, “Who
is the surgeon?” Everyone in my group was stumped, people suggested that maybe the surgeon
was a step dad. The trainer then shared with us that the surgeon was the boy’s mother. Everyone
in the group, including myself, was so embarrassed that we did not consider the mom to be a
surgeon because of gender stereotypes in the medical field. With this training in mind I plan to
diligently try to keep bias out of my evaluation of the upcoming interviews in my department.
As a front desk supervisor in housing I have high levels of access to thousands of student
records, have the power to charge student accounts, influence where students live during their
graduate program, and have access to medical records. With these high levels of access it is of
the upmost importance that I am an ethical leader and coach my staff to maintain the privacy of
our students. Staying in the parameters of laws like the Family Educational Rights and Privacy
Act (FERPA), which protects the privacy of students’ records at institutions that receive federal
funds, is an example of preserving ethics in my current role (FERPA, 2018). It is my hope that I
can be an altruistic leader, which is an approach to ethics that means the leader acts in the best
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
interest of others, even if it is not in the best interest of the leader personally (Guerriero, 2019,
Unit 4, p.8). I’d like to have a style of leadership like that of Lorraine Hensley, who we read
about in case one. (Guerriro, 2019. Case studies. p.1). I believe the legacy President Hensley left
at Perimeter Community College was that of an altruistic leader. She went above and beyond for
her staff and her students and this is also something I would like to be known for.
and the theory of authentic leadership, with an emphasis on inclusion and ethical leadership. As a
novel leader I feel I have complied a philosophy that is a strong leadership foundation within
higher education. I have challenged myself to lead with high regard to task and relationship
development. I plan to outline my expectations in writing and provide this to my team, so that
leadership style so that I can adjust to the needs of my staff. I have a tendency to coach, which
can be useful in some situations, but not always. I am going to lean away from coaching and
providing high support. My brand new staff needs me to direct at this point in their development.
Instead of emphasizing support, I am going to provide more task direction in writing. Lastly,
being an inclusive and ethical leader who maintains positive staff relationships is instinctual for
leadership I plan to learn more about myself and continuing my studies of higher education.
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Leadership Philosophy and Action Plan
References
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA). (2018, March 01). Retrieved August 6,
Guerriero, W. (2019). Case studies and online discussion procedures [PDF]. CCHE 600
Guerriero, William (2019). Unit 1: Traits, skills, and behavioral approaches to leadership [PDF].
Guerriero, William (2019). Unit 2: Situational leadership; path-goal and LMX theory;
followership and team leadership [PDF]. CCHE 600 Leadership Skills. Retrieved 2019,
August 6
Guerriero, W. (2019). Unit 3: Transformation and adaptive leadership [PDF]. CCHE 600
Guerriero, W. (2019). Unit 4: Leadership in Action. [PDF]. CCHE 600 Leadership Skills.
Zhang, Hui (2014). Teachers’ Leadership Styles in China’s Higher Vocational Colleges.
http://search.ebscohost.com.libproxy.nau.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=eft&AN=9885
0789&site=ehost-live&scope=site
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