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Factors that influence leader identity development in college students

<p> In the present study, I explore the extent to which college students who take a leadership theory course experience a change in their leader identity. As a secondary area of focus, I also explore if students taking a leadership theory course experience changes in their self-perceptions on constructs such as motivation to lead, leadership self-efficacy, leader developmental efficacy, and attitudes and beliefs about leadership. Research has shown that one&rsquo;s self-concept as a leader or one&rsquo;s &ldquo;leader identity&rdquo; influences the leadership opportunities in which he or she chooses to participate (Day &amp; Harrison, 2007). Studies have also shown that leader self-efficacy can influence a student&rsquo;s desire to engage in leadership activities (Dugan, Garland, Jacoby, &amp; Gasiorski, 2008; McCormick &amp; Tanguma, 2007). Leadership self-efficacy and systemic attitudes and beliefs increased over the course of semester-long leadership theory course; while data did not show changes in one&rsquo;s leader identity, motivation to lead, or leader developmental efficacy over the same period of time. Leadership self-efficacy and developmental self-efficacy combined predicted leader identity to the .08 significance level; however, these results should be interpreted with caution in that they only explained 4% of the variance. There were no differences by gender for pretest and posttest scores of students taking a leadership theory class. In addition, there was not a difference between the experimental and comparison group in part due to a small sample size.</p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:10138029
Date20 July 2016
CreatorsThompson, Sara E.
PublisherColorado State University
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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