Schmuck’s Chapter 8:
Leadership
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Leadership conceptualized:
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As a property of an individual
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As a property of a group
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Leadership is an interpersonal influence process: it is not merely
attributes of a single person. It
is a verb rather than a noun
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Functional
Leadership: Leadership is behavior which influences others in the classroom
group to follow. Sometimes such
behaviors are employed by the teacher; at other times they are executed by
students. Sometimes they may
facilitate reaching educational goals; on other occasions they may impede the
achievement of those goals.
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Psychological bases of Influence POWER
[French & Raven]
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Expert Power
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Referent Power
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Legitimate Power
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Reward Power
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Coercive Power
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Informational Power
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Connection Power
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SOCIAL BASES OF INFLUENCE:
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GENDER
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RACE
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ETHNICITY
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DEMOCRATIC,
AUTHORITARIAN AND LAISSEZ-FAIRE LEADERSHIP
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INDIVIDUAL ATTEMPTS AT LEADERSHIP:
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1. A MOTIVE FORCE
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2. AN EXPECTANCY FACTOR
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PREVIOUSLY SUCCESSFUL IN PEER GROUP
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EXPERTISE IN THE CONTENT AREA
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SELF-CONFIDENT
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3. AN INCENTIVE VALUE OF ACTING
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PEER POWER STRUCTURES
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STUDENT EMERGENT LEADERSHIP
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GOAL-DIRECTED
LEADERSHIP: TASK AND SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL FUNCTIONS
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FLEXIBLE LEADERSHIP
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LEADERSHIP FOR EFFECTIVE TEACHING:
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GOOD TEACHERS ARE TRANSFORMATIONAL LEADERS.
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PRACTICAL IDEAS FOR CLASSROOM LEADERSHIP:
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INDIVIDUAL CONTROL AND RESPONSIBILITY
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GROUP CONTROL AND
RESPONSIBILITY
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STUDENT RESONSIBILITIES FOR OTHER STUDENTS: PEER TUTORING.