Davis Edward B, Barneche Kelly, Aten Jamie D, Shannonhouse Laura R, Wang David C, Van Tongeren Daryl R, Davis Don E, Hook Joshua N, Chen Zhuo Job, Lefevor G Tyler, McElroy-Heltzel Stacey E, Elick Emilie L, Van Grinsven Leif, Lacey Ethan K, Brandys Tyler R, Sarpong Philip K, Osteen Sophia A, Shepardson Kati
School of Psychology, Counseling, and Family Therapy, Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL, United States.
Medair, Ecublens, Switzerland.
Front Psychol. 2023 Dec 13;14:1188109. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1188109. eCollection 2023.
Leader humility has been linked to many positive outcomes but not examined in humanitarian aid work. Three studies examined the multilevel correlates, contributions, and consequences of leader humility in Medair-a large, multinational, faith-based aid organization. Study 1 examined correlates of leader humility in a sample of 308 workers and 167 leaders. Study 2 explored multilevel contributions of leader humility in 96 teams comprised of 189 workers. Study 3 utilized a subsample (50 workers, 34 leaders) to explore consequences of Time 1 leader and team humility on outcomes 6 months later.
Participants completed measures of humility (general, relational, team), leader and team attributions (e.g., effectiveness, cohesion, and growth-mindedness), organizational outcomes (e.g., job engagement and satisfaction; worker and team performance), and psychological outcomes (e.g., depression, anxiety, compassion satisfaction, and flourishing).
Leader and team humility contributed to multilevel positive attributions about leaders (as effective and impactful), teams (as cohesive, psychologically safe, and growth-minded), and oneself (as humble), and those attributions contributed to organizational and psychological outcomes. Teams' shared attributions of their leader's humility contributed to higher worker job satisfaction and team performance. Longitudinally, for workers and leaders, leader and team humility were associated with some positive organizational and psychological outcomes over time.
In humanitarian organizations, leader humility seems to act as an attributional and motivational social contagion that affects aid personnel's positive attributions about their leaders, teams, and themselves. In turn, these multilevel positive attributions contribute to several positive team, organizational, and psychological outcomes among workers and leaders.
领导者谦逊已被证明与许多积极成果相关,但尚未在人道主义援助工作中得到研究。三项研究考察了梅达里(一个大型跨国宗教援助组织)中领导者谦逊的多层次关联因素、作用及后果。研究1在308名工作人员和167名领导者的样本中考察了领导者谦逊的关联因素。研究2在由189名工作人员组成的96个团队中探究了领导者谦逊的多层次作用。研究3利用一个子样本(50名工作人员、34名领导者)探究了第1阶段领导者和团队谦逊对6个月后结果的影响。
参与者完成了关于谦逊(一般谦逊、关系谦逊、团队谦逊)、领导者和团队归因(如有效性、凝聚力和成长型思维)、组织成果(如工作投入度和满意度;工作人员和团队绩效)以及心理成果(如抑郁、焦虑、同情满意度和幸福感)的测量。
领导者和团队谦逊促成了对领导者(有效且有影响力)、团队(有凝聚力、心理安全且有成长型思维)以及自身(谦逊)的多层次积极归因,而这些归因促成了组织和心理成果。团队对其领导者谦逊的共同归因促成了更高的工作人员工作满意度和团队绩效。从纵向来看,对于工作人员和领导者而言,随着时间推移,领导者和团队谦逊与一些积极的组织和心理成果相关。
在人道主义组织中,领导者谦逊似乎充当了一种归因和激励性的社会传染因素,影响援助人员对其领导者、团队和自身的积极归因。反过来,这些多层次的积极归因促成了工作人员和领导者中出现的一些积极的团队、组织和心理成果。