Psychological capital as an antecedent to servant leadership in the counseling profession
- 2 January 2022
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis Ltd in Journal of Counselor Leadership and Advocacy
- Vol. 9 (1), 71-85
- https://doi.org/10.1080/2326716x.2022.2036269
Abstract
We investigated psychological capital (PsyCap) as an antecedent of servant leadership. Findings show that PsyCap was a strong predictor of servant leadership, particularly in counseling students when compared to experienced counseling professionals. Suggestions to develop servant leadership in counseling students, counselors, counselor educators, and supervisors are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Meta‐analysis of the impact of positive psychological capital on employee attitudes, behaviors, and performanceHuman Resource Development Quarterly, 2011
- Antecedents of team potency and team effectiveness: An examination of goal and process clarity and servant leadership.Journal of Applied Psychology, 2011
- The Servant Leadership Survey: Development and Validation of a Multidimensional MeasureJournal of Business and Psychology, 2010
- Servant leadership, procedural justice climate, service climate, employee attitudes, and organizational citizenship behavior: A cross-level investigation.Journal of Applied Psychology, 2010
- Psychological capital and authentic leadershipAsia-Pacific Journal of Business Administration, 2010
- Enhancing well‐being and alleviating depressive symptoms with positive psychology interventions: a practice‐friendly meta‐analysisJournal of Clinical Psychology, 2009
- POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL CAPITAL: MEASUREMENT AND RELATIONSHIP WITH PERFORMANCE AND SATISFACTIONPersonnel Psychology, 2007
- Psychological capital development: toward a micro‐interventionJournal of Organizational Behavior, 2006
- The Integrated Developmental Model of supervison: Scale development and validation procedures.Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 1992
- Self-efficacy mechanism in human agency.American Psychologist, 1982