Soldiers Lead Themselves to More Success: A Self-Leadership Intervention Study |
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Authors: | Gerhard A. Lucke Marco R. Furtner |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Leopold-Franzens University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria and Department of Science, Research and Development, Federal Ministry of Defense and Sports, Vienna, Austriagerhard.lucke@uibk.ac.at;3. Department of Psychology, Leopold-Franzens University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria |
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Abstract: | Neck and Manz (1999) Neck, C. P., & Manz, C. C. (1999). In search of the self-led soldier: Army leadership in the twenty-first century. In J. G. Hunt, G. E. Dodge, & L. Wong (Eds.), Out of the box leadership: Transforming the twenty-first army and other top organizations (pp. 153–176). Stamford, CT: JAI Press. [Google Scholar] elaborated in their article “In Search of the Self-Lead Soldier” on the need for continuous improvement of personnel qualities such as increase in self-efficacy, increase of performance, and decrease of perceived strain. Self-leadership is a tool that fosters exactly these personal resources. This study examines self-leadership training effects on soldiers participating in a military training course over 14 weeks. It is the first self-leadership training study to evaluate performance improvement using objective criteria (examination marks, physical tests) in intervention and control group consisting of soldiers of the Austrian army. Its design features a large sample (N = 130), duration of self-leadership training over 10 weeks, and evaluation over 4 time points. The intervention group accomplished significantly higher educational achievements in examinations and physical tests. Also levels of self-efficacy were significantly higher and levels of strain were marginally to significantly lower. |
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Keywords: | self-leadership self-leadership training performance self-efficacy perceived strain |
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