Graduation Year
2010
Document Type
Thesis
Degree
M.A.
Degree Granting Department
Psychology
Major Professor
Russell E. Johnson, Ph.D.
Co-Major Professor
Tammy D. Allen, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Jennifer K. Bosson, Ph.D.
Keywords
Leadership, Servant Leadership, Self-Determination Theory, Needs Satisfaction, Motivation
Abstract
Servant leaders seek to fulfill the needs of followers and promote their success and well-being through a follower-centric, generative approach to leadership. This study proposes a model to describe the mediating mechanism of follower needs satisfaction, as proposed by Self-Determination Theory (SDT), for the relationship between servant leadership (SL) behaviors and employee outcomes (e.g., job performance, job attitudes, well-being, community prosocial behavior). Supervisor-subordinate dyads (N = 147 pairs) from four diverse organizations completed surveys about the supervisors' leadership behaviors and the subordinates' job experiences. Structural equation modeling and regression analyses were conducted to determine the nature of relationships between SL, SDT needs, and the organizational outcomes. Direct and indirect effects were observed among these variables, suggesting SDT primarily mediates the relationship between supervisors' SL behaviors and subordinates' job attitudes.
Scholar Commons Citation
Saboe, Kristin N., "Prioritizing Those Who Follow: Servant Leadership, Needs Satisfaction, and Positive Employee Outcomes" (2010). USF Tampa Graduate Theses and Dissertations.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/etd/1758