Archive for January 26th, 2021

TOPIC: NUSING SHORTAGE THESIS STATEMENT: Covid 19 has played a great role in exposing the severity go the shortage of nursing staff available to treat patients.

Scholarly APA Paper Assignment Guidelines
Purpose of this project
This paper will provide a forum for the students to demonstrate the use of critical thinking skills in the discussion of issues related the profession of nursing. A forum paper presents new thoughts in response to published materials and sparks debate. It is factually based on data published in the literature. This paper will demonstrate the students ability to communicate the findings of the research process to a group of their professional colleagues. The intent of this assignment is for the student to demonstrate the ability to synthesize readings and write clearly using the APA style. You may select any topic relevant to this course. The topic is to be submitted to the faculty for approval. A potential reference list in APA format, summary table and thesis statement are required as preliminary assignments to help you develop your final paper. Please note – settings within Canvas enable Turnitin.com to scan your final paper submitted under the assignment tab.

Academic writing is not opinion-based or blog-like in nature. It begins with a thesis and should guide the readers towards an evidence based solution. The goal is to produce an informed argument based on a variety of viewpoints. Throughout this process you must sort out what you know to be factual from that which you think or feel about the topic (defsa (Links to an external site.)).

Project Objectives
By completing this project the registered nursing student will be able to:

Discuss the issue and its importance to nursing.
Examine factors that influence thinking about the issue.
Consider a variety of viewpoints and identify assumptions that may underlie them.
Describe the influence of race, gender, and class.
Examine the impact of legal, spiritual, ethical, and cultural factors.
Articulate various perspectives, citing the advantages and disadvantage of each.
Develop each perspective, until the issue is well described from many vantage points.
Establish and articulate your own opinion after reviewing information from a variety of sources.
Make judgments, without emotional bias.
Demonstrate well-rounded critical thinking, incorporating previous knowledge.
Write clearly, logically, and thoughtfully.
Your paper should be written clearly and succinctly. This means that you should use the minimum amount of words necessary to thoroughly explain your topic and incorporate the objectives above. On average, former students have been able to accomplish this in 6 pages, not including title page and references. There is no firm minimum or maximum number of pages. I am more interested in what you have to say and how well you say it. Additional writing resources are located under Modules>Course Resources.

All due dates for this project are published in the course schedule. Rubrics are located within each assignment link. The assignment tool within the web course will be used to submit the formal paper.

It is expected that you will meet the published due dates. No late work will be accepted.

Topic Selection
Select a general, non-clinical topic related in some way to this course in the nursing field that interests you. By non-clinical, I mean do not select a specific drug, disease, diagnosis or treatment.
The topic should be an issue, something that has multiple perspectives that can be presented in the paper.
Search the Nursing Literature in the UCF Library. Your reference list should include 8-10 articles from nursing journals that are current within the last 5 years and that are appropriate to the topic. Do not go back more than 7 years.  DO NOT rely on GOOGLE to provide scholarly support for your paper. A blog is not an acceptable resource.

Nurses gather and assess data/evidence to identify and define problems and propose solutions based on research. Think about the various area of nursing that are impacted by the problem as well as the implications for the role they play in the proposed solution

The Process
Explore your topic choice

You may find it helpful to begin by exploring some valuable websites linked here.
Write your topic choice in the form of a question. Are you interested in finding the answer to the question that you wrote? An interesting, well-written question will help you limit selection of articles and keep you enthused on the topic.
With your question in hand, search CINAHL or other sources of professional NURSING journals (review the Library Orientation module) for articles pertaining to your topic.
Read at least 3 articles on your topic. Do you still like the topic? Do you still like the wording of your question? Is this the topic you want to immerse yourself in? If no, select another topic and start over.
Confirm your question
After you have read a few articles, you may want to refine your topic question. The clearer your question is, the easier this project will be for you!
Continue gathering peer-reviewed articles, you will probably need to review 8-10 to have a general sense of the topic and its issues.
Begin a list of common themes that you are finding in the articles. Put the list on paper, not just in your head!
Clarify your understanding of the topic
Look at the reference list attached to the articles that you read for general information. Do you see other articles you should retrieve for review? Are the other articles current? No older than 5 years?
Pull articles that you need, and read them. Have you now explored all the common themes of your topic? Can you thoroughly answer your question? If yes, you have enough articles. If no, back to CINAHL or other sources for additional searching. Once you have enough articles to answer the question, quit collecting them and move forward.
Read all the articles that you have. Really understand them, as it makes the writing process so much easier.
Articulate your topic and its common themes to someone else. Can you speak to this topic?
Define all key terms and concepts related to your topic. Don’t just do this in your head, put it in writing.
Create a summary table. Distinguish clearly the central issues related to your topic, and the peripheral issues. Can you verbally speak to these with someone else? Have you written these down?
If you hate this topic, then start over. If you like this topic, move forward.
The Writing Begins
Secure an area that you can use exclusively for writing. You want to be able to leave your articles out, so that you can sit down for an hour, without reorganizing each time. You will not believe how much time this saves!
Post your writing time-line in a visible place, and make every effort to stick to it!
Some students find it helpful to develop an outline to organize ideas and topic flow.
Use the topic outline you developed to write a draft of the body of your paper.
Don’t forget the librarian and the resources for writing they may have.
Support statements you make with appropriate references. If the thoughts are someone else’s, then give them credit via a citation. Use direct quotes if the information is profound, otherwise paraphrase. Paraphrasing is not merely changing a word here and there; it is taking several sentences or sources and putting the information into your own words.Use current APA  edition.
You now have a good 1st draft! 
It may be helpful to Visit the UCF Writing Center either in person, by phone, or by video chat. Use their suggestions as you see fit. 
Did you fully develop the issue?
Once you have the draft, the real work begins!
Have you included all perspectives and assumptions related to your topic?
Are the perspectives contained in your paper all inclusive? Not just the ones you personally support. If you didn’t cover them all, fill the gaps. If you did, move forward.
You need to make a point to describe how race, gender, and class influence this particular issue. If you did this, great, move forward. Look for places within your paper that you can add this.
You are expected to examine the legal, spiritual, ethical, and cultural factors that impact your topic. Did you speak to each of these within your draft? If yes, move forward. If no, fill the gaps.
You should be getting the idea by now!
Carefully examine your topic, utilizing the ethical principles of: autonomy, beneficence, non maleficence, justice, and veracity discussed in your textbook. Have you spoken to these in your draft? If yes, great! If no, fill the gaps.
At this point, you should have an extremely good 2nd draft
Base your opinions on the evidence
Now that you developed the topic, and examined all the various perspectives, you should use the evidence to form an opinion on the topic.
Look back at your introduction. What were you trying to do in this paper? Can you provide a reasonable answer to your question, citing reasons why you believe this is the answer?
Support your opinion with relevant data, evidence, experience, and any other information that deem appropriate.
Stay away from “I” messages throughout the paper; research writing is generally done in 3rd person.  Avoid any personalization in a scholarly term paper.
Implications for nursing
Now that you have answered your topic question, and formed an opinion, what does it mean to nursing?
Will this impact practice, administration, education, research and/or the profession as a whole?
Describe the implications that you see, and your rationale.  Again stay away from “I” messages; research writing is done in 3rd person.
Address the positives and the negatives. Are the consequences acceptable? To whom? Who or what would be affected if this happened?
Closing Paragraph
Once you are happy with the paper, write your conclusion.
Re-read you introduction, and construct a brief highlight of your paper.
Do not introduce any new material in the conclusion. You are basically “telling us what you have already told us.”
It helps to lead off this paragraph with. “In summary, “
Once you have written the conclusion, double check to see that you have not included new information. If yes, back fill the body of the paper to include this, if it is relevant. The conclusion is not the place to give the reader brand new information, but rather synthesize what you have already told them.
Re-read the whole paper. Does it flow? Have you answered your question? Have you drawn an evidenced based conclusion? If yes, move forward. If no, keep working on it.
You now have a 3rd draft (almost there….)
Reference List
The reference list should include a minimum of 6-8 current peer-reviewed articles from nursing or other scientific journals, which are appropriate to the topic.
Everything that is cited in the body of the paper should be found on the reference page and there should be nothing on the reference page that is NOT found cited in the body of the paper (with exceptions as noted in current APA manual).
The best rule of thumb is to OVER cite your references rather than to UNDER cite your references.
A good technique to ensure that all ideas presented in the paper have been properly credited is to go back through the paper asking yourself, did I know that before I began to research the topic for this paper.
Any idea that did not TOTALLY come from your brain needs to be credited to the one or many sources in which you read it.
Current 7th edition APA style is required. Use your APA guide carefully-that is WHY you bought it. This resource is used in every nursing course throughout the UCF curriculum.
This list should be alphabetized by the author’s last name. Do not re-order the authors names within the citation.
Re-read your entire paper. Does it have a good flow? Correct the problems.
You now have your 4th draft (the body of the paper will probably be 5-6 pages). If you find that the body is much longer, you need to identify essential content and trim the rest. Your goal is to clearly and succinctly cover all aspects of the assignment. Number of pages is not as important as what you say in those pages.
Final Edit
After letting your paper “rest” a few days, read it again. Do you like the way it flows? Does it make sense? Edit, revise, refine.
Let someone else read and critique your paper.  This can be very telling. If your reader is having difficulty following, then I probably will too. Edit, revise, refine.
Check your entire paper for current edition APA formatting, and appropriate citing of references.
If the paper is the best that you can possible do, then it is ready for submission!
You should now have your final copy.
Submit your formal paper into the assignment tool of the course.

Grading of project
The paper will be graded based on compliance with APA format and ability to present material through the written word. Students are directed to review the Scholarly APA Paper rubric for specific grading criteria.

Please submit a list of at least 10 potential articles you have researched in the library relative to your topic. These should be articles from professional journals (preferably NURSING journals) that you plan to use in your paper. Please prepare the list using APA 7th edition format as you would a reference page.  (DUE FEB 3RD)

MMIP Topic

The MMIP Project

Please note that you MAY NOT select a COMPANY for the MMIP.  You must select a specific product or service.  From the syllabus: Each student must choose a new or existing product/service to analyze for the Marketing Management Individual Project (MMIP). No two students can work on the same product/service.

For example, you might select AHA sparkling water as a specific product offered by the Coca-Cola Company, but you could not just select Coca-Cola as a company.

A good research paper is built on solid research.  The better your research (targeted, current, credible, etc.), the better chance you have of writing a good research paper.  For the MMIP project, credible business publications such as the Wall Street Journal, Fortune, Ad Age, etc. count as scholarly sources.

To search for specific journals, first head to the main JFL website: https://www.liberty.edu/library/ and click on Journal by Name under “Research” at the bottom of the page.  This should be right across from the slideshow on the homepage.  From there, they can type in the name of the journal they are looking for in the search bar to see if we have it available.  Once you select one of the journals, you’ll find where it can be accessed under the “View Online” heading.  Selecting one of those options will bring you to the database where you can view the journal.

As an example, I found that the Wall Street Journal could be accessed using ABI Inform.  I went to that site and typed in LG TV and found 356 articles in the Wall Street Journal that dealt with LG TVs.
Length of Weekly MMIP paper

If we assume 200 words per question each week times approximately 5 questions per week , that leads to a 1000 word-count approximation for each weekly paper.  The 200 words per question allows the student to answer the question comprehensively but succinctly.  I’m hopeful that students will learn how to write an initial draft of a paper and then edit that draft to reduce the number of words while improving the clarity of their writing.  It’s a challenge I know, but I think writing succinctly is a great skill to learn especially when dealing with business audiences.  Thus, attempt to keep each weekly MMIP paper to approximately 1000 words.  This agrees with the final MMIP paper rubric (week eight) where the body of the report is to be 5,0007,250 words in length (not counting the title page or reference pages).

Global Supply Chain

Review Case 14.1, Nurnberg Augsburg Maschinenwerke (pp. 265-267). Submit your analysis with recommendations to answer the following questions:

Which of the routing alternatives would you recommend to meet the initial 90-day deadline for the 25-bus shipment? Why? Train or waterway? To which port(s)? What would it cost?
Here is the grading rubric (Links to an external site.) for the assignment.

PROPOSAL FOR TECHNOLOGY SOLUTION

SCENARIO
For this task, you will write a proposal in response to the attached Request for Proposals (RFP) from the Seamus Company. The companys background information is included in the attached Seamus Company Context. The attached RFP Questions from Vendors will help to inform your proposal.

Your proposal should demonstrate your research and your technology solution to the problem and show the organization you can meet its needs. Consider what the organization wants (e.g., low cost, high quality, efficiency) and how your proposed technology solution will meet the organizations needs. The body of your proposal should clearly and specifically outline the solution and how it will work.

REQUIREMENTS
Create a proposal for the Seamus Company by doing the following:

A.  Create a title page that includes each of the following elements:

  project name that summarizes the nature of the solution

  name of the proposer (individual or company)

  signature block with a space for your signature and the date

B.  Create a table of contents.

C.  Create an abstract that includes each of the following:

  summary of the problem

  recommendation of the solution

  description of how the proposed solution benefits the customer

  outcomes of the project

  funding requirements

  your expertise relevant to the solution you propose

Note: Expertise described here could be real or hypothetical to fit the scenario.

D.  Create the body of your proposal by doing the following:

1.  Explain your proposed solution as it relates to the requirements in the attached Request for Proposals (RFP).

2.  Summarize three published works or case studies that inform the implementation of the proposed solution.

3.  Describe how the goals, supporting objectives, and deliverables of the proposed project will be accomplished.

4.  Provide a projected timeline with completion dates of the deliverables for your project.

5.  Provide a list of resources and their associated costs needed to implement the proposal.

6.  Explain how you will use an evaluation framework to measure the success and effectiveness of the project once it is completed.

E.  Justify how the technology solution meets the business needs of the Seamus Company.

F.  Create a letter of transmittal or cover letter that includes the following:

  an introduction

  a body that expands on the reasons for the proposal

  a conclusion

Note: Any supplemental material that would help the company or organization understand the details of the solution should be placed in an additional section titled Appendix.

G. Acknowledge sources, using in-text citations and references, for content that is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized.

H.  Demonstrate professional communication in the content and presentation of your submission.

Covid 19 Vaccine

Journal
Topic: Covid 19 Vaccine
Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner as Leaders in Healthcare Reform
A description of the priority you selected and the benefits and challenges of further researching this area. Provide an overview of the articles you found (using appropriate APA citations) relating to this priority, and highlight any key findings. Explain how continued research in this area could strengthen the ability of nurses to lead in both individual organizations and as advocates of health care reform.
In a 2-3-pages paper:
Priority Health Issue Selected
Benefits and Challenges of Researching this Area
Overview of Outside Articles with Key Findings
How Continued Research in this Area could Strength Nurses to Lead
References

Understanding Leadership Stlyes

Construct a six-slide PowerPoint presentation that presents the knowledge you learned about leadership styles from the textbook. You can create your PowerPoint from scratch or download and use this template as a guide: Week 3 PowerPoint template. Use the bullet points below as a guide for each of your slides.

Slide 1:
Include the title of the assignment, your name, the schools name, the course code and name (i.e., BUS 105: Business and Academic Success), your instructors name, and todays date.
Slide 2:
Define authoritarian leadership in your own words.
Identify three characteristics or traits associated with this style.
Slide 3:
Define democratic leadership in your own words.
Identify three characteristics or traits associated with this style.
Slide 4:
Define laissez-faire leadership in your own words.
Identify three characteristics or traits associated with this style.
Slide 5:
Identify a well-known leader.
Briefly describe who the leader is or was.
Identify their leadership style.
Are (or were) they an authoritative, democratic, or laissez-faire leader?
Tip: Consider a current well-known leader or a past, historical leader (e.g., Oprah, Bill Gates, Malala Yousafzai, Elon Musk, Abraham Lincoln). Chapter 3 provides some examples of leaders you could use. Additionally, consider reviewing the Leadership Snapshots in Chapter 1 and Chapter 2 for examples.

Slide 6:
Describe your own leadership style.
What leadership style do you most identify with and why?
What are your leadership strengths and areas of opportunity?

From the book
3.1 Leadership Philosophy Explained
Each of us approaches leadership with a unique set of beliefs and attitudes about the nature of people and the nature of work. This is the basis for our philosophy of leadership. For example, some think people are basically good and will happily work if given the chance. Others think people are prone to be a bit lazy and need to be nudged to complete their work. These beliefs about people and work have a significant impact on an individuals leadership style and probably come into play in every aspect of a persons leadership.

Do you think people like work, or do you think people find work unpleasant? This was one of the central questions addressed by Douglas McGregor in his famous book The Human Side of Enterprise (1960). McGregor believed that managers need to understand their core assumptions about human nature and assess how these assumptions relate to their managerial practice.

In particular, McGregor was interested in how managers view the motivations of workers and their attitudes toward work. He believed that understanding these motivations was central to knowing how to become an effective manager. To explain the ways that managers approach workers, McGregor proposed two general theoriesTheory X and Theory Y. McGregor believed that by exploring the major assumptions of each of these theories people could develop a better understanding of their own viewpoints on human behavior and the relationship of these viewpoints to their leadership style. The following is a description of both theories. As you read, ask yourself if the assumptions of the theory are consistent or inconsistent with your own attitudes about leadership.

Theory X
Theory X is made up of three assumptions about human nature and human behavior (see Table 3.1). Taken together, these assumptions represent a philosophy of leadership that many leaders exhibit to one degree or another.Theory X is made up of three assumptions about human nature and human behavior (see Table 3.1). Taken together, these assumptions represent a philosophy of leadership that many leaders exhibit to one degree or another.

Assumption 1: The average person dislikes work and will avoid it if possible.
This assumption argues that people do not like work; they view it as unpleasant, distasteful, or simply a necessary evil. According to this assumption, if given the chance, people would choose not to work. An example of this assumption is the worker who says, I only go to work to be P-A-I-D. If I didnt need to pay my bills, I would never work. People with this perspective would avoid work if they could.

Assumption 2: People need to be directed and controlled.
This assumption is derived directly from the first assumption. Since people naturally do not like work, management needs to set up a system of incentives and rewards regarding work that needs to be accomplished because workers are often unwilling or unable to motivate themselves. This assumption says that without external direction and incentives people would be unmotivated to work. An example of this is the high school teacher who persuades students to hand in homework assignments by threatening them with bad grades. The teacher forces students to perform because the teacher thinks that the students are unwilling to do it or incapable of doing it without that force being applied. From the perspective of Theory X, leaders play a significant role in encouraging others to accomplish their work.

Assumption 3: People want security, not responsibility.
The picture this assumption paints is of workers who want their leaders to take care of them, protect them, and make them feel safe. Because it is too difficult to set their own goals, workers want management to do it for them. This can only happen when managers establish the guidelines for workers. An example of this assumption can be observed on a sorting line for an orchard, where the employees only have to focus on completing the specific tasks set before them (e.g., picking out bad fruit, filling boxes with fruit) and are not required to take initiative for decisions on their own. In general, because of the pace and repetitiveness of the work, the sorters are not required to accept many challenging responsibilities. Instead, they are told what to do, and how and when to do it. Consistent with this assumption, this example highlights how some workers are not ambitious but want job security above everything else.

So what does it mean if a persons personal leadership philosophy is similar to Theory X? It means these leaders have a tendency to view workers as lazy and uninterested in work because they do not value work. As a result, Theory X leaders tend to be directive and controlling. They supervise followers closely and are quick to both praise and criticize them as they see fit. At times, these leaders remind workers of their goal (e.g., to be P-A-I-D) or threaten them with punishment to persuade them to accomplish tasks. As the person in charge, a Theory X leader sees his or her leadership role as instrumental in getting the job done. Theory X leaders also believe it is their role to motivate followers because these workers have little self-motivation. Because of this belief, these leaders take on the responsibility for their followers actions. From the Theory X perspective, it is clear that followers have a need for leadership.

Theory Y
Like Theory X, Theory Y is based on several specific assumptions about human nature and behavior (see Table 3.2). Taken together, the assumptions of Theory Y present a distinctly different perspective from the ideas set forth in Theory X. It is a perspective that can be observed to a degree in many leaders today.

Assumption 1: The average person does not inherently dislike work. Doing work is as natural as play.
Rather than viewing work as a burden or bad, this assumption suggests people see work as satisfying and not as a punishment. It is a natural activity for them. In fact, given the chance, people are happy to work. An example of this can be seen in what former president Jimmy Carter has done in his retirement. He has devoted much of his time and energy to constructing homes throughout the United States and around the world with Habitat for Humanity. Certainly, the former president does not need to work: He does so because work is natural for him. All his life, Carter has been used to making a contribution to the well-being of others. Working with Habitat for Humanity is another opportunity for him to contribute. Some people view work as a natural part of their lives.

Assumption 2: People will show responsibility and self-control toward goals to which they are committed.
As opposed to Theory X, which suggests that people need to be supervised and controlled, Theory Y suggests that people can and will make a conscious choice to work on their own.

People can be committed to the objectives of their work. Consider some examples from the sports world. Successful athletes are often highly committed to their goals and usually do not need to be controlled or supervised closely. Coaches design training plans for these athletes, but the athletes do the work themselves. A successful long-distance runner does not need to be pushed to run 60 training miles a week in preparation for a marathon because the runner is already motivated to run long distances. Similarly, an Olympic swimmer does not need to be forced to do daily 3-mile pool workouts at 5:00 a.m. because the swimmer chooses to do this independently of any coachs urging. These athletes are self-directed because they are committed to their goals. This is the point of Theory Y. When people can find commitment in their work, they will work without needing leaders to motivate or cajole them. Put another way, when people have a passion for their work, they will do it even without outside direction.

Assumption 3: In the proper environment, the average person learns to accept and seek responsibility.
While Theory X argues that people lack ambition, prefer to be directed, and want security, Theory Y assumes that the average person is inherently resourceful and, if given the chance, will seek to take responsibility. If given the chance, people have the capacity to engage in a wide range of goal-setting and creative problem-solving activities. Theory Y argues that, given the opportunity, people will act independently
3.2
3.2 Leadership Styles Explained
What behaviors do you exhibit as a leader? Do you like to be in control and keep up on the activities of your followers? Or do you believe in a more hands-off approach in leading others, letting them make decisions on their own?

Whatever your behaviors are as a leader, they are indicative of your leadership style. Leadership style is defined as the behaviors of leaders, focusing on what leaders do and how they act. This includes leaders actions toward followers in a variety of contexts. As noted in the previous section, your leadership style is driven by your personal leadership philosophy. In the following section, we discuss the most commonly observed leadership styles associated with Theory X and Theory Y: authoritarian, democratic, and laissez-faire. While none of these styles emerges directly from Theory X or Theory Y, the authoritarian and democratic styles closely mirror the ideas set forth in these theories, respectively.

The primary work on styles of leadership was by Lewin, Lippitt, and White (1939), who analyzed the impact of various leadership styles on small group behavior. Using groups of 10-year-old boys who met after school to engage in hobby activities, the researchers analyzed what happened when their adult leaders used one of three styles: authoritarian, democratic, or laissez-faire. The groups of boys experienced each of the three styles of leadership for a six-week period.

The outcome of the study by Lewin and colleagues was a detailed description of the nature of the leadership behaviors used for each of the three styles (White & Lippitt, 1968). They also described the impact each of these three styles had on group members.

The following sections describe and elaborate on their findings and the implications of using each of these leadership styles. Be aware that these styles are not distinct entities (e.g., like personality traits). They overlap each other. That is, a leader can demonstrate more than one style in any given situation. For example, a leader may be authoritarian about some issues and democratic about others, or a leader may be authoritarian at some points during a project and democratic at others. As leaders, we may display aspects of all of these styles.

Authoritarian Leadership Style
In many ways, the authoritarian leadership style is very similar to Theory X. For example, authoritarian leaders perceive followers as needing direction. The authoritarian leader needs to control followers and what they do. Authoritarian leaders emphasize that they are in charge, exerting influence and control over group members. They determine tasks and procedures for group members but may remain aloof from participating in group discussions. Authoritarian leaders do not encourage communication among group members; instead, they prefer that communication be directed to them. In evaluating others, authoritarian leaders give praise and criticism freely, but it is given based on their own personal standards rather than based on objective criticism.

Recent research on authoritarian leadership distinguishes between autocratic leadership, where authority and power are concentrated in the leader; authoritarian leadership, which uses a domineering style that generally has negative outcomes (House, 1996); and authoritarian followership, which is the psychological mindset of people who seek powerful leaders (Harms, Wood, Landay, Lester, & Vogelsang Lester, 2018). There is also evidence that situational and personality factors can make authoritarian leadership more likely, including uncertain or negative circumstances where strong leadership is perceived to be a solution to problems, such as when a group is performing poorly, under time pressure, or facing an external threat (Harms et al., 2018).

Some have argued that authoritarian leadership represents a rather pessimistic, negative, and discouraging view of others. For example, an authoritarian leader might say something like Because my workers are lazy, I need to tell them what to do. Or, My job is to motivate the workers because they tend to lose interest in their tasks.

Others would argue that authoritarian leadership is a much-needed form of leadershipit serves a positive purpose, particularly for people who seek security above responsibility. In many contexts, authoritarian leadership is used to give direction, set goals, and structure work. For example, when employees are just learning a new job, authoritarian leadership lets them know the rules and standards for what they are supposed to do. Authoritarian leaders are very efficient and successful in motivating others to accomplish work. In these contexts, authoritarian leadership is very useful.

What are the outcomes of authoritarian leadership? Authoritarian leadership has both pluses and minuses. On the positive side, it is efficient and productive. Authoritarian leaders give direction and clarity to peoples work and accomplish more in a shorter period. Furthermore, authoritarian leadership is useful in establishing goals and work standards. On the negative side, it fosters dependence, submissiveness, and a loss of individuality. The creativity and personal growth of followers may be hindered. It is possible that, over time, followers will lose interest in what they are doing and become dissatisfied with their work. If that occurs, authoritarian leadership can create discontent, hostility, and even aggression.

In addition, authoritarian leadership can become abusive leadership, where these leaders use their influence, power, and control for their personal interests or to coerce followers to engage in unethical or immoral activities. For example, a coach who withholds playing time from athletes who openly disagree with his play calls or a boss who requires salaried employees to work up to 20 hours of overtime each week or be replaced with someone who will are both examples of the dark side of authoritarian leadership. Historically, we have seen how authoritarian leaders such as Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler took advantage of susceptible followers by projecting power, conviction, and control during unstable political times and getting people to go along with their violent schemes.

While the negative aspects of authoritarian leadership appear to outweigh the positive, it is not difficult to imagine contexts where authoritarian leadership would be the preferred style of leadership. For example, in a busy hospital emergency room, it may be very appropriate for the leader in charge of triaging patients to be authoritarian with various types of emergencies. The same could be true in other contexts, such as the chaperone of a middle school canoe trip, who for the sake of student safety needs to establish and enforce clear rules for conduct.

In the 2004 film Miracle, based on the 1980 U.S. mens Olympic hockey teams experience, coach Herb Brooks uses an authoritarian style of leadership to prepare his college-age athletes to face the heavily favored Soviet team. Brooks is aggressive and demanding, pushing his players to become more fit and do extra workouts and benching them when they dont give their best. At first, they dont like Brooks or his coaching method, but under his direction, the team develops confidence and a sense of unity that enables the players to perform at their peak and win the gold medal.

Despite the negatives of authoritarian leadership, this form of leadership is common and necessary in many situations.

Democratic Leadership Style
The democratic leadership style strongly resembles the assumptions of Theory Y. Democratic leaders treat followers as fully capable of doing work on their own. Rather than controlling followers, democratic leaders work with followers, trying hard to treat everyone fairly without putting themselves above followers. In essence, they see themselves as guides rather than as directors. They give suggestions to others, but never with any intention of changing them. Helping each follower reach personal goals is important to a democratic leader. Democratic leaders do not use top-down communication; instead, they speak on the same level as their followers. Making sure everyone is heard is a priority. They listen to followers in supportive ways and assist them in becoming self-directed. In addition, they promote communication between group members and in certain situations are careful to draw out the less-articulate members of the group. Democratic leaders provide information, guidance, and suggestions, but do so without giving orders and without applying pressure. In their evaluations of followers, democratic leaders give objective praise and criticism.

The outcomes of democratic leadership are mostly positive. First, democratic leadership results in greater group member satisfaction, commitment, and cohesiveness. Second, under democratic leadership there is more friendliness, mutual praise, and group mindedness. Followers tend to get along with each other and willingly participate in matters of the group, making more we statements and fewer I statements. Third, democratic leadership results in stronger worker motivation and greater creativity. People are motivated to pursue their own talents under the supportive structure of democratic leadership. Finally, under a democratic leader group members participate more and are more committed to group decisions. A democratic leadership style is effective for U.S. presidents who appoint highly qualified individuals to their cabinet, each of whom has great responsibility for running their respective government departments. While the president has the final responsibility for making decisions, in cabinet meetings the members can share the newest information, debate policy, brainstorm different scenarios, and make better recommendations together. Abraham Lincoln was a U.S. president known for actively listening to his cabinet members and inviting different viewpoints. At the same time, however, he exhibited autocratic leadership in some decision making while leading the country through the Civil War.

The downside of democratic leadership is that it takes more time and commitment from the leader. Work is accomplished, but not as efficiently as if the leader were authoritarian. For example, running staff meetings has sometimes been likened to herding cats, because people arent always controllable; they have their own ideas and opinions and want to voice them, and consensus isnt guaranteed.

Laissez-Faire Leadership Style
The laissez-faire leadership style is dissimilar to both Theory X and Theory Y. Laissez-faire leaders do not try to control followers as Theory X leaders do, and they do not try to nurture and guide followers as Theory Y leaders do. Laissez-faire stands alone as a style of leadership; some have labeled it nonleadership. The laissez-faire leader is a nominal leader who engages in minimal influence. As the French phrase implies, laissez-faire leadership means the leader takes a hands-off, let it ride attitude toward followers. These leaders recognize followers but are very laid back and make no attempt to influence their activities. Under laissez-faire leadership, followers have freedom to do pretty much what they want to do whenever they want to do it. Laissez-faire leaders make no attempt to appraise or regulate the progress of followers, which may be due to various reasons, including disinterest, reluctance to take a stand, or limited positional authority. For example, an interim coach, church pastor, or college president may be hired to occupy a short-term role until a full-time replacement is found. The interim may not be expected or empowered to initiate changes or restructure the organization and mainly functions as a stabilizing presence and a placeholder for the eventual organizational leader.

Given that laissez-faire leadership involves nominal influence, what are the effects of laissez-faire leadership? Laissez-faire leadership tends to produce primarily negative outcomes. The major effect is that very little is accomplished under a laissez-faire leader. Because people are directionless and at a loss to know what to do, they tend to do nothing. In the earlier example, if an interim leader is in a position too long and takes no action on important issues facing an organization, followers may get frustrated. Without a sense of purpose and direction, group members have difficulty finding meaning in their work; they become unmotivated and disheartened.

Giving complete freedom can also result in an atmosphere that most followers find chaotic. Followers prefer some direction; left completely on their own, they become frustrated. As a result, productivity goes down.

Sometimes, however, the lack of leadership from above can result in frustration that spurs followers to act and create positive outcomes. An example of this would be the student survivors of the shootings at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in 2018, who organized a protest movement against gun violence: March for Our Lives. They were motivated in part by the perception that incumbent politicians werent doing enough to curb gun violence and keep students safe. On their website, they issued the call that [n]ow is the time for the youth vote to stand up to the gun lobby when no one else will (March for Our Lives, 2019a). The groups mission statement explains, As a nation, we continue to witness tragedy after tragedy, yet our politicians remain complacent. The Parkland students, along with young leaders of all backgrounds from across the country, refuse to accept this passivity and demand direct action to combat this epidemic (Book Report Network, 2019). The group has galvanized youth and others across the country to work to facilitate change through efforts aimed at encouraging voter registration, calling on local leaders around the country to commit to change, and advocating for gun violence prevention through new policies (March for Our Lives, 2019b).

In addition, people who are self-starters, who excel at individualized tasks and dont require ongoing feedback, may prefer working under laissez-faire leaders. It gives them the freedom to be themselves.

For example, Angela is the president of a website development company who uses independent contractors from across the globe. In certain respects, you could describe her leadership style as laissez-faire. The programmers who develop the websites code are in Poland, the designer is in India, the content writer is in the United Kingdom, and Angela is in the United States. When developing a site, Angela maps out and communicates the basic framework for the website and then relies on all of the individual contractors to determine the tasks they need to do for the sites development. Because their tasks can be dependent on anothersfor example, the designer needs the programmers to write the code to make the page display graphics and images in a certain waythey do communicate with one another, but because of time zone differences, this is mostly done by email. As their leader, Angela is kept apprised of issues and developments through an electronic project management system they share, but because all of the contractors are experts at what they do and trust the other team members to do what they do best, she lets them problem-solve issues and concerns with one another and rarely gets involved.

While there are a few situations where laissez-faire leadership is effective, in a majority of situations, it proves to be unsuccessful and unproductive.

3.4
3.4 Leadership Styles in Practice
Each leader has a unique style of leadership. Some are very demanding and assertive while others are more open and participative. Similarly, some leaders could be called micromanagers, while others could be labeled nondirective leaders. Whatever the case, it is useful and instructive to characterize your leadership regarding the degree to which you are authoritarian, democratic, or laissez-faire.

It is important to note that these styles of leadership are not distinct entities; it is best to think of them as occurring along a continuum, from high leader influence to low leader influence (see Figure 3.1). Leaders who exhibit higher amounts of influence are more authoritarian. Leaders who show a moderate amount of influence are democratic. Those who exhibit little to no influence are laissez-faire. Although we tend to exhibit primarily one style over the others, our personal leadership styles are not fixed and may vary depending on the circumstances.

A diagram visualizes the different styles of Leadership and where they fall on the range of Leader Influence.Description
Figure 3.1 Styles of Leadership

Consider what your results of the Leadership Styles Questionnaire on pages 7375 tell you about your leadership style. What is your main style? Are you most comfortable with authoritarian, democratic, or laissez-faire leadership? If you are the kind of leader who likes to structure work, likes to lay out the ground rules for others, likes to closely supervise your followers, thinks it is your responsibility to make sure followers do their work, wants to be in charge or to know what others are doing, and believes strongly that rewarding and punishing followers is necessary, then you are authoritarian. If you are the kind of leader who seldom gives orders or ultimatums to followers, instead trying to work with followers and help them figure out how they want to approach a task or complete their work, then you are primarily democratic. Helping each follower reach his or her own personal goals is important to a democratic leader.

In some rare circumstances, you may find you are showing laissez-faire leadership. Although not a preferred style, it is important to be aware when one is being laissez-faire. Laissez-faire leaders take a very low profile to leadership. What followers accomplish is up to them. If you believe that your followers will thrive on complete freedom, then the laissez-faire style may be the right style for you. However, in most situations, laissez-faire leadership hinders success and productivity.
Summary
All of us have a philosophy of leadership that is based on our beliefs about human nature and work. Some leaders have a philosophy that resembles Theory X: They view workers as unmotivated and needing direction and control. Others have a philosophy similar to Theory Y: They approach workers as self-motivated and capable of working independently without strong direct influence from a leader.

Our philosophy of leadership is played out in our style of leadership. There are three commonly observed styles of leadership: authoritarian, democratic, and laissez-faire. Similar to Theory X, authoritarian leaders perceive followers as needing direction, so they exert strong influence and control. Resembling Theory Y, democratic leaders view followers as capable of self-direction, so they provide counsel and support. Laissez-faire leaders leave followers to function on their own, providing nominal influence and direction.

Effective leadership demands that we understand our philosophy of leadership and how it forms the foundations for our style of leadership. This understanding is the first step to becoming a more informed and competent leader.
authoritarian leadership style 62

democratic leadership style 63

laissez-faire leadership style 64

Discussion

Discussion 3 Using the information from Chpts 5 and 6 discuss the following question:
(use APA format and cite references appropriately) Use 275 words

Topic:  Which of the performance reward practicesindividual, team, or organizationalwould work better in improving organizational goals? Please comment with reference to an organization of your choice.

See details

Please share with us recent (within the last two weeks) news that has an international and a business aspect.

HERE IS A SAMPLE OF WHAT IT NEEDS TO LOOK LIKE

Current News Discussion Sample
No unread replies.No replies.
After Years of Blockbuster Global Sales, Apple’s iPhone Hits a Slump by Laura Sydell

https://www.npr.org/2019/01/15/685414032/after-years-of-blockbuster-global-sales-apples-iphone-hits-a-slump

Last year Apple Inc. had become the first American public company valued at $1 Trillion. However, Apple stock lost significant value after CEO Tim Cook lowered revenue expectations. The major reason for lower expectations is reported to be declining sales in Asia. According to the news, China and Taiwan together account for 20% of Apples overall business.

Two main reasons for declining sales in Asia are highlighted. The first reason is that Chinese companies like Huawei manufacture similar phones and sell them at a much lower price. US officials have accused Chinese companies of using commercial spies to steal know how and manufacture high tech products at much lower prices (Wilber, 2018). They have added that this creates unfair competition between the United States and China as well as unfair competitive advantage to Chinese companies.

According to Apple CEO Tim Cook, another reason for the declining sales in China is the trade war between the Trump administration and China. He believes that although many Chinese may prefer the iPhone, they cannot afford it.  Current news has been drawing attention to deteriorating economic conditions in China. This news is a good example of how connected and global the world is. A decline in China or any other markets that U.S. companies do business in will eventually hurt the U.S. economy. We read about the importance of emerging economies and their middle class. The growing middle class in emerging economies constitute a group of people with purchasing power and they run the engine of the economy. When people loose purchasing power around the world, it has a negative effect on all global companies whereas when economies get stronger and middle class grows, there are more people with purchasing power.

project Management

Chapter 2 discusses numeric models and I will have to be the first to confess they seem to be viable options to selecting a project.  However, there are some risks associated with using numbers only to make decisions especially if you you use only one method.  But how could you use the steps in project portfolio management to reduce the risks associated using numerical models to select a project.  I have been involved with many projects where the sales team crunched numbers regarding a project but they really didn’t consider extenuating circumstances before they made their decision.  Keep this point in mind.

Also consider, we are in the age of Big Data.  Now of course Big Data isn’t just numerical data but it is definitely a component.  Take a look at the 2 articles (One attached the other is a hyperlink) as they make some interesting points.  Does the the concept of Big Data influence your thinking here?  After all it is a popular tool. 

Make sure you think broad about the problem discussed in the first paragraph rather than looking at one specific action.  There are two different philosophies here. Please explain your points and use supporting evidence.  Your submission must be at least 2-3 pages but I more than 3 pages is fine if that’s what it takes to fully answer this question.  There should be a title page and a reference page in addition to your content pages.  Your paper and references should be in APA format.

Forum Shopping

In its user service agreement, Facebook includes a forum selection clause that requires users with legal disputes to file any lawsuits against Facebook in courts physically located near its northern California corporate headquarters. Review the discussion of this issue in your textbook (Legal Strategy 101, pp. 102-103); then, analyze the following questions:

1. Is forum shopping ethical? What are you using as your ethical standard?

2. Should courts enforce forum selection clauses in business-to-consumer contracts like the Facebook user agreement? Why or why not?

3. Suppose Facebook did not have a forum selection clause in its user agreement. Would Facebook be subject to the jurisdiction of every state court in the United States, since it has millions of users in every U.S. state?

This assignment requires that you analyze both a legal concept (forum shopping) and its application in a business contract (forum selection clause). Read the course material and the assignment carefully, and do not confuse or conflate the two.

Use the words “Ethical” or “Not Ethical” in the subject line of your thread to identify your conclusion. Do not use attachments, as these are cumbersome and inhibit the discussion process.