Title: The Leadership Calibration Scale
1The Leadership Calibration Scale
- Under a good General, there is no bad soldier
Chinese proverb - Captain Karen J. Brown
- Director Human Resources Research Evaluation
- Canadian Forces
- Brown.KJ3_at_forces.ca
2The Importance of Climate
Climate
Performance
3The Influence of Leadership
Leaders
Climate
Performance
4Leaders and Climate
Leaders
Climate
Performance
5Previous Research
- Officers tended to believe that their men were
more favorably disposed on any given point than
they were (Stouffer et al. 1949) - Leaders are not having the positive leadership
effect on their subordinates that they think they
do (Eyres, 1998) - Overestimation on moral issues increased with
rank/position and inaccuracy was associated with
high confidence in ratings (Korpi, 1965)
6Confidence in Judgment
- Confidence Climate Assessment
- Inaccurate assessments related to high levels of
confidence (Korpi, 1965 Farley, 2002) - Cognitive Psychology
- Confidence usually increases as difficulty of
judgment increases (Baranski Petrusic, 1999) - Overconfidence found in ratings of cognitive
judgment, intellectual and knowledge tasks
7Leaders Calibration Scale
- Determine if leaders were over rating their
subordinates perceptions - Determine if discrepancies were associated with
high levels of confidence - Develop an instrument that could assist in the
re-calibration of perceptions and confidence - GOAL to improve unit combat effectiveness by
improving leaders accuracy of assessing unit
climate
8Climate Dimensions
- Cohesion
- Task Cohesion
- Morale / Social Cohesion
- Professional Morale
- Perceptions of Immediate Supervisors Leadership
Skills - Military Ethos
- Confidence in Leadership (6 positions)
9Sample Item
Task Cohesion A groups collective enthusiasm
and persistence in pursuing assigned
goals. Â Example items My platoon/troop is
ready for combat. I am confident in the combat
abilities of soldiers in my platoon. Â On this
aspect of unit climate, how would the majority of
your soldiers respond to the following
statement  Task cohesion is high in my
platoon/troop/company. Â O 1 O 2
O 3 O 4 O 5
 Strongly disagree
Strongly agree
10Demographics
11Analyses
- Two Scales
- Unit Climate Profile
- Officer Calibration Scale
- Average for each climate constructs for each
participant - Merge two files
- Difference score
- Leaders rating subordinates rating
- Positive number indicates overrating
12Results
High
Mean Ratings
Low
13Differences between Companies
High
Mean Ratings
Low
14Differences between Platoons
High
Mean Ratings
Low
15Confidence with AssessmentClimate
High
Mean Ratings
Low
r2 .29
r2 .24
r2 .32
r2 .27
r2 .22
16Confidence with AssessmentLeadership Positions
High
Mean Ratings
Low
r2 .29
r2 .22
r2 .18
r2 .29
r2 .27
r2 .11
17Correlation between Difference Scores and
Confidence
18Re-calibration Hypothesis
Mean Difference Scores
19Confidence across a Tour
High
Mean Ratings
Low
20Principal Components Analysis
- Direct Leadership and their Confidence Rating
- Indirect Leadership and respective Confidence
Rating - Perceptions of Climate
- Confidence in Climate
- Perceptions of CO and Confidence Rating
21Results Summary
- H1 Leaders rated climate higher than
subordinates - H2 Differences found between Companies and
Platoon - H3 Accuracy negatively related to confidence
- H4a Some climate variation over time
- H4b Confidence varied little across time
- PCA yielded a 5-component solution
22Future Directions
- Research
- Controlled experiment
- Defensive mechanisms
- Situational differences
- Professional Development
- Self-awareness
- Formal Training
23 HDO LCS Intentions
- Provide Commanding Officers
- with an objective tool to measure and monitor
important human dimensions that affect
operational readiness of Units. - Provide leaders
- with a method to assess their ability to judge
subordinates perceptions on climate to make
necessary changes.
24- Captain Karen J. Brown
- Brown.KJ03_at_forces.ca