Saturday, June 7, 2014
How can men help "Leaning In"
I am an MBA student, and I have been studying the benefits of diversity
in the workplace. I came across Sheryl Sandberg's TED talk and that led me
to start reading her book. My worry is that "Leaning In" by itself
might not be enough. There have been several waves of feminism and the
stats aren't moving enough. There are structural issues at play, but I
can't help but wonder, as a future business leader, what can someone
like me do to help facilitate women's Leaning In? Is it just accepting
blind resumes, or would it go further to imposing hard quotas in the
hiring of women to leadership positions? I want to be an ally, now and
going forward, but I don't know what I can do on a micro level. Any
advice is appreciated.
Thursday, June 5, 2014
Is Emotional Intelligence a Worthwhile Metric?
I had a student when I was teaching English 101 who wrote a
paper about the idea of multiple intelligences. This was ten years ago, but I
still remember it because he was an intelligent student and the topic was
novel. All I was aware of as a measure of intelligence was the IQ, and having a
high IQ myself, I knew that that couldn’t be the end of personal quantification,
nor a great indicator of success.
We’ve been talking about Emotional Intelligence in class and
in the readings and it sound like a good concept, but if you unpack it a bit it
feels troublesome.
For me, the biggest issue is about self-reporting. On an IQ
test, the whole bit is about pattern recognition. There is a right or wrong
continuation to the pattern, and you’re timed. These tests are often given and
scored by professionals. I was tested once I was a child and theoretically at
the time it was a pretty fixed number.
All I was ever told that it was more than two standard deviations beyond
average. At the time I wanted a number,
but it was quite obvious I was generally one of the smartest students in the
room. You lose this with self-reporting.
First, there is no right answer. Secondly, it is bounded on a spectrum.
Thirdly, people lie. The fact of taking a test allows your mind to think of
what may be the right answer and what may be the best that will give you the
highest score. It’s a Heisenberg thing, I suppose. I can’t give myself a 180 IQ
even by guessing against the administrator.
Then there’s this. I took the tests. I was highly
emotionally intelligent. I think I am good at naming the feelings I have, and
being able to control them in the situations in which they arise. However, if
you asked me, in general, how I was at reading people’s emotions and reacting
to them, I’d say I was horrible. Specifically I didn’t have a problem with it.
Am I less self-aware than I knew, or was I gaming the test on some level. The
problem is that there is no right answer when it comes to emotions. It is a
highly subjective thing that is given the illusion of exactness by drawing
numbers from a spectrum and then averaged and averaged again. I think it might
be fair to talk about someone being more or less emotionally intelligent, but
the quantification is a bridge too far.
Finally, the problem with numbering is that emotional
intelligence can change within the person on a short time period depending on
the subject’s cognitive load. Basically, the less you have going on with your
own life can free up your mind for being open to other’s existences and what
they have coursing through their limbic system. This brings me to mind of a
thought I had in class: what is the EQ of a psychopath? They are able to get by
in society by performing the emotions that they feel are supposed to feel, but
have none of their own. Therefore their mind is clear and they can read people,
but they lack empathy.
Overall, I like the idea of multiple intelligences,
emotional intelligence being one of many axes that we can use to judge
ourselves and improve ourselves. However, I would not put too much stock into
it until we can solve some of the glaring issues with it.
Wednesday, June 4, 2014
Quick thought on Charisma
Earlier when we were talking about trait
theory, it came up that most traits can be taught to some extent. The
exception being charisma.
Now, in readng about the transformational leader in our book, they emphasize the importance of charisma for a transformational leader, even saying that some people overlap the idea of the two things -- you can't be transformational without being chariamatic.
So the questions arises, can someone with charisma be a good leader? Do they become leaders at all, or if they rise to management positions, is their leadership role only based on their senority? That is will they be leaders or just followers?
Now, in readng about the transformational leader in our book, they emphasize the importance of charisma for a transformational leader, even saying that some people overlap the idea of the two things -- you can't be transformational without being chariamatic.
So the questions arises, can someone with charisma be a good leader? Do they become leaders at all, or if they rise to management positions, is their leadership role only based on their senority? That is will they be leaders or just followers?
Quick thought on Followers
I know this came up before in our
reading, but what is the role of the follower? There will be more in any
organization than leaders, but their traits seem absent from the
discussion in the book. Leadership, as a relaional, process-based thing
is dependent on the followers.
That said, what are the traits of a follower? How can you be a better follower for a leader you have chosen to follow.
Finally, how does the leader/follower dynamic work within the individual? I am both a leader and a follower in my organization (or I hope so), are both of these roles part of an ongoing process that dialectially feeds organically to each other, or are they distinct roles?
I, uh, have no answers for any of these; they are just the things that came to mind when reading.
That said, what are the traits of a follower? How can you be a better follower for a leader you have chosen to follow.
Finally, how does the leader/follower dynamic work within the individual? I am both a leader and a follower in my organization (or I hope so), are both of these roles part of an ongoing process that dialectially feeds organically to each other, or are they distinct roles?
I, uh, have no answers for any of these; they are just the things that came to mind when reading.
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Does gender matter? Yes.
Thoughts – normative versus positive statements: After years
of looking at existing gender roles, it was interesting to move from theorizing
about the nature of gender in society, and to have a frank discussion in class
about the practical nuances of gender in the work place (and to see that some people
in a business class setting don’t have the PC cudgel over their heads).
However, for theorizing on a power gradient that doesn’t
find me at the bottom I often feel as if those who are at society’s bottom are
over-stating their case. Of course when I theorize from a position of weakness
I myself feel empowered. Basically I see class and not race. But gender does matter, in many ways.
The problem is, we can’t just solve everything by women
leaning in – though I am attracted to the idea. The important thing is that in
spite of years of feminism (You can date it to about 1848 in Saratoga Falls)
there is still this divide. So it is not just women needing to lean in, but
important for those who control the structure to stop thinking power and
opportunity are a zero-sum game and that we can grow as a country better when
women’s roles in both the workplace and the home are given value on par with
what men see their own value. This is true for gender and sex and race.
The discouraging thing is that some recent studies have
shown that even in egalitarian settings like Sweden, there is limited income
mobility. Those born poor are going to stay poor, and those born rich will stay
rich. We can point to several counter examples that might disprove that narrative,
but the broad sweep of the numbers say that you probably won’t be the president
if you were born poor or female or trans or of a darker shade of skin.
You have to look at the history and see that there are two
strands for the out group to try to gain power. There are assimilationists who
try to come into the existing power structure, and there are revolutionaries of
many stripes that want to overthrow the existing patriarchy / class structure /
gender norms / etc. I am not one for chaos and revolution. I’d rather sit on my
couch and read a book. However, the revolutionaries have long been marginalized
as too extreme and the people who just want a seat at the table have been fed,
but then ignored. I don’t know what the answer is but I have the feeling that
outside of a revolution, the power structure will remain in place and only
slowly be chipped at by minority groups of all stripes. They will continue to
have to both conform to and break away from stereotypes. They will have to be
twice as good for less pay.
We still remember Ginger Rodgers and Fred Astaire. The thing
is Ginger did everything Fred did, only backwards and in heels. That sticks
with me, and it remains true. I can see the inequity in the system, but I struggle
because I feel weak and powerless to change such an entrenched edifice.
Maybe I have to get off my couch.
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Peirce and Newstrom's: Leaders and the Leadership Process
The thing that strikes me about the book is that a lot of the readings seem dated. For example, looking at a chapter on trait theory:
There has to have been a lot of studies furthering the standardization of trait description, maybe looking at active leadership while a participant is an fMRI machine, or something, but there is something else. The first reading for today's classes are about the meaning (or absence of meaning) of various traits that disprove a "great man" theory of leadership. The thing is written in 1991. That was in the middle of the first Bush recession that would lead to the Clinton / tech expansion (bubble). Here's the thing -- context matters in the proces. We've had at least two world-changing events in the almost 25 years since this was written: 9/11 and the financial crisis of 2008. Traits matter, but are there traits that are more useful now than 20 years ago? I can think that maybe consensus-building may be more important now than then. When they brought back Wall Street for a sequal, Gordon Gekko wasn't a figure to be emulated for his lone-wolf ways. Maybe now is a time we need leadership more than ever.
Basically, my feeling is that I way over-paid for this book, and it is representative of the problems with the college text book industry as a whole.
Another case in point. I spent the last two years clearing some classes to build a foundation for my MBA classes. In many cases, the book was almost as expensive as the tuition of the class. Granted, I was at a community college, but still. These were two or three hundred dollar books once you had the all-important access code to break down the door of the electronic problem sets and the like. I think I want to see the MOOCs come and disrupt this paradigm, but I also like the face-to-face interaction of a community of scholars.
Thankfully I have that in my current class, because this book doesn't feel like its adding much.
There has to have been a lot of studies furthering the standardization of trait description, maybe looking at active leadership while a participant is an fMRI machine, or something, but there is something else. The first reading for today's classes are about the meaning (or absence of meaning) of various traits that disprove a "great man" theory of leadership. The thing is written in 1991. That was in the middle of the first Bush recession that would lead to the Clinton / tech expansion (bubble). Here's the thing -- context matters in the proces. We've had at least two world-changing events in the almost 25 years since this was written: 9/11 and the financial crisis of 2008. Traits matter, but are there traits that are more useful now than 20 years ago? I can think that maybe consensus-building may be more important now than then. When they brought back Wall Street for a sequal, Gordon Gekko wasn't a figure to be emulated for his lone-wolf ways. Maybe now is a time we need leadership more than ever.
Basically, my feeling is that I way over-paid for this book, and it is representative of the problems with the college text book industry as a whole.
Another case in point. I spent the last two years clearing some classes to build a foundation for my MBA classes. In many cases, the book was almost as expensive as the tuition of the class. Granted, I was at a community college, but still. These were two or three hundred dollar books once you had the all-important access code to break down the door of the electronic problem sets and the like. I think I want to see the MOOCs come and disrupt this paradigm, but I also like the face-to-face interaction of a community of scholars.
Thankfully I have that in my current class, because this book doesn't feel like its adding much.
Derek Jeter and trait theory.
In our leadership class, we’re learning about the theories
of leadership as it has grown as an academic discipline. It has shifted from a
great man theory to looking at something more specific, identifying traits that
make a great leader. These can be better
because instead of just hoping a great man stumbles along, you can search for,
and then reinforce traits that are desirable in a leader. This has issues, since trying to decide what
trait is more desirable and which possible candidate has more of whatever you
want may be hard to objectify. We
discussed a case study about who a manager should hire, and all three possible candidates
had traits that you could argue for in saying why candidate A was better than candidate
C.
Thinking about this earlier made me think of this morning,
when I was tired. I like to think that my normal persona at work is charismatic
and knowledgeable and honest and all those positive traits that you look for in
an employee (and a leader). But being the first day back from a long weekend, I
just wanted to put my head down and work through what I needed to do – and I
still didn’t finish because it was a bit more complex than I thought it would
be.
Thus it lead me to a great weakness of looking solely at
traits. They’re situational. Even if someone has all the traits you want, they
need to display them when necessary. It made me think of this weekend. It was
Jeter’s last games in Chicago, and the sports talkers were giving his career a
fine tribute. He’s played for 20 years and have like five championships, and is
known to be clutch in when it matters. Here’s the thing though. There is no
such thing as clutch. The numbers nerds have broken down the stats, and when
they look at people we call clutch what really happened is that they performed
at their expected level based on their past results. There is choking, but what we see as clutch
in terms of baseball is just consistency.
I think that metaphor can easily be brought over to the study of
leadership. It is not enough to just have positive traits, you have to show them
at all times. Then you’ll be clutch in the office or the diamond.
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