Prison Leadership: The Relationship Between Warden Leadership Style and Correctional Officer Job Satisfaction

The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between Tennessee wardens’ leadership practices and correctional officer job satisfaction. Utilizing the Leadership Practices Inventory (LPI), the relationship between correctional officers’ perception of the warden’s leadership practices an...

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Main Author: Schofield, Derrick D.
Other Authors: School of Leadership
Format: Others
Published: Piedmont International University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/84508
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spelling ndltd-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-845082020-10-03T06:13:37Z Prison Leadership: The Relationship Between Warden Leadership Style and Correctional Officer Job Satisfaction Schofield, Derrick D. School of Leadership Robertson, Lori Powell, Brent Lowes, Nicole Prisons Staff Retention Leadership Leadership Practices Inventory Job Satisfaction Survey Correctional Officers Wardens Turnover Corrections The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between Tennessee wardens’ leadership practices and correctional officer job satisfaction. Utilizing the Leadership Practices Inventory (LPI), the relationship between correctional officers’ perception of the warden’s leadership practices and the LPI norms were examined. Additionally, utilizing the LPI, the relationship between self-ratings of the warden’s leadership practices and the observer rating of the LPI were assessed. Lastly, utilizing the Job Satisfaction Survey (JSS) and observer LPI, correlations were examined between the correctional officers’ job satisfaction and their perception of the warden’s leadership practices. Findings of this study showed lower correctional officers ratings of the wardens on the five LPI subscales than the inventory’s norms. In a comparison of the LPI wardens’ self-perception and the correctional officers’ observer perception, correctional officers rated the wardens lower than the wardens rated themselves. The overall ratings of the correctional officer Job Satisfaction Survey (JSS)were neutral. However, of the nine JSS subscales, the results identified the nature of their work and supervision as the most positive. Pay, contingent reward, and promotional opportunities were rated as the primary reasons for job dissatisfaction. Additional findings indicated a positive relationship between job satisfaction and each of the five subscales of the LPI. Doctor of Philosophy in Leadership 2018-08-06T16:30:43Z 2018-08-06T16:30:43Z 2018-02-23 Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10919/84508 Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 United States http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/us/ ETD application/pdf Piedmont International University
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Prisons
Staff Retention
Leadership
Leadership Practices Inventory
Job Satisfaction Survey
Correctional Officers
Wardens
Turnover
Corrections
spellingShingle Prisons
Staff Retention
Leadership
Leadership Practices Inventory
Job Satisfaction Survey
Correctional Officers
Wardens
Turnover
Corrections
Schofield, Derrick D.
Prison Leadership: The Relationship Between Warden Leadership Style and Correctional Officer Job Satisfaction
description The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between Tennessee wardens’ leadership practices and correctional officer job satisfaction. Utilizing the Leadership Practices Inventory (LPI), the relationship between correctional officers’ perception of the warden’s leadership practices and the LPI norms were examined. Additionally, utilizing the LPI, the relationship between self-ratings of the warden’s leadership practices and the observer rating of the LPI were assessed. Lastly, utilizing the Job Satisfaction Survey (JSS) and observer LPI, correlations were examined between the correctional officers’ job satisfaction and their perception of the warden’s leadership practices. Findings of this study showed lower correctional officers ratings of the wardens on the five LPI subscales than the inventory’s norms. In a comparison of the LPI wardens’ self-perception and the correctional officers’ observer perception, correctional officers rated the wardens lower than the wardens rated themselves. The overall ratings of the correctional officer Job Satisfaction Survey (JSS)were neutral. However, of the nine JSS subscales, the results identified the nature of their work and supervision as the most positive. Pay, contingent reward, and promotional opportunities were rated as the primary reasons for job dissatisfaction. Additional findings indicated a positive relationship between job satisfaction and each of the five subscales of the LPI. === Doctor of Philosophy in Leadership
author2 School of Leadership
author_facet School of Leadership
Schofield, Derrick D.
author Schofield, Derrick D.
author_sort Schofield, Derrick D.
title Prison Leadership: The Relationship Between Warden Leadership Style and Correctional Officer Job Satisfaction
title_short Prison Leadership: The Relationship Between Warden Leadership Style and Correctional Officer Job Satisfaction
title_full Prison Leadership: The Relationship Between Warden Leadership Style and Correctional Officer Job Satisfaction
title_fullStr Prison Leadership: The Relationship Between Warden Leadership Style and Correctional Officer Job Satisfaction
title_full_unstemmed Prison Leadership: The Relationship Between Warden Leadership Style and Correctional Officer Job Satisfaction
title_sort prison leadership: the relationship between warden leadership style and correctional officer job satisfaction
publisher Piedmont International University
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/84508
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