Are We Making Progress? Assessing Goal-Directed Behaviors in Leadership Development Programs

Leadership development programs increasingly help participants engage in their career transitions. Therefore, these programs lead participants to establish not only development goals, which usually involve the improvement of a specific leadership competency, but also goals that relate to career adva...

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Main Authors: Ferran Velasco, Joan Manuel Batista-Foguet, Robert J. Emmerling
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01345/full
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spelling doaj-71d89adbab564f019a2b56e77a5a82942020-11-24T21:28:53ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782019-06-011010.3389/fpsyg.2019.01345430908Are We Making Progress? Assessing Goal-Directed Behaviors in Leadership Development ProgramsFerran VelascoJoan Manuel Batista-FoguetRobert J. EmmerlingLeadership development programs increasingly help participants engage in their career transitions. Therefore, these programs lead participants to establish not only development goals, which usually involve the improvement of a specific leadership competency, but also goals that relate to career advancement or to achieving a more general life aspiration. Assessing goal attainment, as a measure of program impact, may take years as goals vary greatly in terms of nature, timeframe, and domain. The purpose of this study was to overcome this challenge by providing a measure of goal progress as a necessary antecedent of goal attainment, and which we operationalize through a general scale of goal-directed behaviors. Subject-matter experts assessed the content validity of the measure. Factor analysis, using three samples, revealed four dimensions identified as Sharing Information, Seeking Information, Revising the Plan, and Enacting the Plan. This new scale allows data collection as early as a few months after setting the goals, which can provide practitioners with an earlier indication of program impact and facilitate future academic studies in this field.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01345/fullgoal-directed behaviorsgoal settinggoal strivingleadership developmentscale development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ferran Velasco
Joan Manuel Batista-Foguet
Robert J. Emmerling
spellingShingle Ferran Velasco
Joan Manuel Batista-Foguet
Robert J. Emmerling
Are We Making Progress? Assessing Goal-Directed Behaviors in Leadership Development Programs
Frontiers in Psychology
goal-directed behaviors
goal setting
goal striving
leadership development
scale development
author_facet Ferran Velasco
Joan Manuel Batista-Foguet
Robert J. Emmerling
author_sort Ferran Velasco
title Are We Making Progress? Assessing Goal-Directed Behaviors in Leadership Development Programs
title_short Are We Making Progress? Assessing Goal-Directed Behaviors in Leadership Development Programs
title_full Are We Making Progress? Assessing Goal-Directed Behaviors in Leadership Development Programs
title_fullStr Are We Making Progress? Assessing Goal-Directed Behaviors in Leadership Development Programs
title_full_unstemmed Are We Making Progress? Assessing Goal-Directed Behaviors in Leadership Development Programs
title_sort are we making progress? assessing goal-directed behaviors in leadership development programs
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Leadership development programs increasingly help participants engage in their career transitions. Therefore, these programs lead participants to establish not only development goals, which usually involve the improvement of a specific leadership competency, but also goals that relate to career advancement or to achieving a more general life aspiration. Assessing goal attainment, as a measure of program impact, may take years as goals vary greatly in terms of nature, timeframe, and domain. The purpose of this study was to overcome this challenge by providing a measure of goal progress as a necessary antecedent of goal attainment, and which we operationalize through a general scale of goal-directed behaviors. Subject-matter experts assessed the content validity of the measure. Factor analysis, using three samples, revealed four dimensions identified as Sharing Information, Seeking Information, Revising the Plan, and Enacting the Plan. This new scale allows data collection as early as a few months after setting the goals, which can provide practitioners with an earlier indication of program impact and facilitate future academic studies in this field.
topic goal-directed behaviors
goal setting
goal striving
leadership development
scale development
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01345/full
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