Servant Leadership

Servant Leadership

Case 2 SLP

Background

In today’s business world, we rely on leaders to make persuasive arguments to motivate employees and “get the job done.” This requires both written and oral skills.

In Module 1 SLP, we examined the use of ethos, logos, and pathos in influence. In this SLP, you will apply these principles to make your own argument as if you were a

supervisor in your Fortune 10 company.

Required Reading

Refer to the required and optional readings on effective communication messages and methods, as well as the readings from Module 1 on ethos, logos, and pathos.

Session Long Project

Using what you have learned in this module and module 1 about effective communication, develop a slide deck (minimum of 10 slides) with voice narration in which you

introduce a new organizational policy at your company.

Keys to the Assignment

The key aspects of this assignment that, at a mimimum, should be covered in your presentation include:

Your presentation should consist of at least 8 slides explaining the implementation of a new organizational policy (e.g., no cell phones on the job) and an audio

recording of your presentation (no more than 5 minutes long) where you (a dedicated leader) communicate the benefits and implications of your policy. The goal is to be

able to influence (e.g., ethos, logos, pathos) your followers/audience to embrace this organizational change.

Once you have completed the PowerPoint presentation, you will use “Written Narration” for your presentation.

You will be particularly assessed on:

Your completion of all the steps in the exercise.

Your ability to synthesize information and present a concise and meaningful PowerPoint and audio presentation.

How well you demonstrate the principles of communication presented in this module.

The clarity and quality of your PowerPoint and audio presentations.

SLP Assignment Expectations

Your paper will be evaluated using the following five criteria:

Assignment-Driven Criteria (Precision and Breadth): Does the paper fully address all Keys to the Assignment? Are the concepts behind the Keys to the Assignment

addressed accurately and precisely using sound logic? Does the paper meet minimum length requirements?

Critical Thinking (Critical Thinking and Depth): Does the paper demonstrate graduate-level analysis, in which information derived from multiple sources, expert

opinions, and assumptions has been critically evaluated and synthesized in the formulation of a logical set of conclusions? Does the paper address the topic with

sufficient depth of discussion and analysis?

Business Writing (Clarity and Organization): Is the paper well written (clear, developed logically, and well organized)? Are the grammar, spelling, and vocabulary

appropriate for graduate-level work? Are section headings included in all papers? Are paraphrasing and synthesis of concepts the primary means of responding to the

Keys to the Assignment, or is justification/support instead conveyed through excessive use of direct quotations?

Effective Use of Information (Information Literacy and References): Does the paper demonstrate that the student has read, understood, and can apply the background

materials for the module? If required, has the student demonstrated effective research, as evidenced by the student’s use of relevant and quality sources? Do

additional sources used in the paper provide strong support for conclusions drawn, and do they help in shaping the overall paper?

Citing Sources: Does the student demonstrate understanding of APA Style of referencing by inclusion of proper end references and in-text citations (for paraphrased

text and direct quotations) as appropriate? Have all sources (e.g., references used from the Background page, the assignment readings, and outside research) been

included, and are these properly cited? Have all end references been included within the body of the paper as in-text citations?

Reference

Maxwell, J.C. (2010). Everyone Communicates, Few Connect: What the Most Effective People do Differently. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson.

Required Reading

Barbuto, J. E., & Wheeler, D. W. (2007). Becoming a servant leader: Do you have what it takes? NebGuide. Retrieved from

http://ianrpubs.unl.edu/epublic/pages/publicationD.jsp?publicationId=873

Blanchard, K. (2015). Satisfaction and great results come with servant leadership. YouTube Video. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDEgqbg40SM

McChrystal, S. (2011): Listen, learn…then lead. YouTube Video. Retrieved from http://www.ted.com/talks/stanley_mcchrystal

Myatt, M. (2012) 10 communication secrets of great leaders. Forbes/leadership. Retrieved from http://www.forbes.com/sites/mikemyatt/2012/04/04/10-communication-

secrets-of-great-leaders/#f9e0afc1e06e

Nagy, J. (2013). Servant leadership: Accepting and maintaining the call of service. Community Tool Box, University of Kansas. Retrieved from

http://ctb.ku.edu/en/table-of-contents/leadership/leadership-ideas/servant-leadership/main

Neufeld, D. J., Wan, Z., & Fang, Y. (2010). Remote leadership, communication effectiveness and leader performance. Group Decision and Negotiation, 19(6), 227-246.

Parris, D. L., & Peachey, J. W. (2013). A systematic literature review of servant leadership theory in organizational contexts. Journal of Business Ethics, 113(3),

377–393.

Peters, Tom (2010). Leadership: Servant Leadership. YouTube video. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHIKRmEaC6Y

Vancouver, J.S. (2013). Systems theory of organizations, in E.H. Kessler (ed) Encyclopedia of Management Theory vol II. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc. pp

815-820.

Optional Readings and References

Greenleaf, R. K. (1970). The Servant as Leader. Retrieved from http://www.benning.army.mil/infantry/199th/ocs/content/pdf/The%20Servant%20as%20Leader.pdf

Servant Leadership Based on Robert Greenleaf’s Writings. (2010) YouTube Video. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OHd7s2OzpVI&feature=related

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