Author:
Bond Carmel,Stacey Gemma,Westwood Greta,Long Louisa
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the impact of leadership development programmes, underpinned by Transformational Learning Theory (TLT).
Design/methodology/approach
A corpus-informed analysis was conducted using survey data from 690 participants. Data were collected from participants’ responses to the question “please tell us about the impact of your overall experience”, which culminated in a combined corpus of 75,053 words.
Findings
Findings identified patterns of language clustered around the following frequently used word types, namely, confidence; influence; self-awareness; insight; and impact.
Research limitations/implications
This in-depth qualitative evaluation of participants’ feedback has provided insight into how TLT can be applied to develop future health-care leaders. The extent to which learning has had a transformational impact at the individual level, in relation to their perceived ability to influence, holds promise for the wider impact of this group in relation to policy, practice and the promotion of clinical excellence in the future. However, the latter can only be ascertained by undertaking further realist evaluation and longitudinal study to understand the mechanisms by which transformational learning occurs and is successfully translated to influence in practice.
Originality/value
Previous research has expounded traditional leadership theories to guide the practice of health-care leadership development. The paper goes some way to demonstrate the impact of using the principles of TLT within health-care leadership development programmes. The approach taken by The Florence Nightingale Foundation has the potential to generate confident leaders who may be instrumental in creating positive changes across various clinical environments.
Reference35 articles.
1. Crisis management, transnational healthcare challenges and opportunities: the intersection of COVID-19 pandemic and global mental health;Research in Globalization,2021
2. The Kirkpatrick model for training evaluation: bibliometric analysis after 60 years (1959–2020);Industrial and Commercial Training,2021
3. Anthony, L. (2023), “AntConc (version 3.5.9) [computer software]”, available at: www.laurenceanthony.net/software/antconc/ (accessed 27 January 2023).
4. Self-efficacy: toward a unifying theory of behavioral change;Psychological Review,1977
5. The explanatory and predictive scope of self-efficacy theory;Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology,1986