Abstract
Colleges of agriculture throughout the United States place an emphasis on leadership courses where undergraduates develop professional skills. Students entering colleges of agriculture experience varied training in terms of leadership and associated skills. However, it is not understood how this leadership training relates to having more power and control while being happy, intrinsically motivated, and engaged in learning. Socio- Psychological measures of flow and power pose during an undergraduate leadership course were used to determine associations of undergraduates within different domains of learning. This study determined associations between: 1) flow and power pose during leadership course activities; 2) happiness, intrinsic motivation, and engagement in learning; and 3) learning experiences where flow and power pose associations existed. There were positive associations between flow and power pose experiences among students in an undergraduate leadership course. Additionally, there were positive associations between power pose and Flow Theory related to constructs of happiness, intrinsic motivation, and engagement of undergraduate leadership students. Power pose and the Experience Sampling Method (ESM) were used determine flow associations of undergraduate students in the cognitive, psychomotor, and affective domains of learning. This research provides a framework for future socio-psychological studies.
Citation
Everett, M.W., Eustice, C.L., McKim, A.J. and Raven, M.R. (2021), "ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN FLOW AND POWER POSE DURING UNDERGRADUATE EXPERIENCES IN A COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE LEADERSHIP COURSE", Journal of Leadership Education, Vol. 20 No. 1, pp. 102-113. https://doi.org/10.12806/V20/I1/R7
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2021, The Journal of Leadership Education
License
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