Abstract
Background: The Development of Groups and Leaders (UGL), provided by the Swedish National Defence College and mentored by UGL-trainers, is one of the most popular management programs among civilians in Sweden. However, there is a lack of scientific evidence regarding the training. We used the affective profile model (i.e., the combination of positive, PA, and negative affect, NA) to mapp important markers of empowerment, self-awareness, adaptive coping skills, and maturity among the UGLtrainers. The aims were: (1) to compare profiles between UGL-trainers and managers/supervisors and (2) to investigate differences in personal characteristics. Method: UGL-trainers (N = 153) and the comparison group (104 Swedish Chiefs of Police) completed an online survey on optimism, self-esteem, locus of control, and affect. The four profiles are: self-fulfilling (high PA, low NA), high affective (high PA, high NA), low affective (high PA, low NA), and self-destructive (low PA, high NA), Results: The self-fulfilling profile was more common among UGL-trainers (25.70%) than among Chiefs of Police (19.20%). UGL-trainers, compared to Chiefs of Police, were more likely to express a self-fulling than a low affective profile (OR = 2.22, p
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Ricciardi, M. R., Åkerman, J., Eerikäinen, P., Ambjörnsson, A., Arnten, A. C. A., Mihailovic, M., … Garcia, D. (2014). Professional group development trainers’ personality characteristics and affective profiles. Frontiers in Psychology, 5(OCT). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01191
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.