השוואת שיטות
סקרו את השיטות שבחרתם זו לצד זו; שורות שבהן יש הבדל מודגשות.
| Public Sector Leadership Assessment× | Organizational Culture Assessment in Public Sector× | |
|---|---|---|
| תחום | Public Administration | Public Administration |
| משפחה | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| שנת המקור≠ | 2003 | 2011 |
| הוגה השיטה≠ | Montgomery Van Wart | Kim S. Cameron & Robert E. Quinn |
| סוג≠ | Survey-based leadership competency assessment scale | Survey-based organizational culture diagnostic scale |
| מקור מכונן≠ | Van Wart, M. (2003). Public-Sector Leadership Theory: An Assessment. Public Administration Review, 63(2), 214–228. DOI ↗ | Cameron, K. S., & Quinn, R. E. (2011). Diagnosing and Changing Organizational Culture: Based on the Competing Values Framework (3rd ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. ISBN: 9780470650264 |
| כינויים | Government Leadership Assessment, Public Leadership Competency Assessment, Public-Sector Leadership Evaluation, Administrative Leadership Assessment | Public Sector OCAI, Competing Values Culture Assessment, Public Organizational Culture Diagnosis, Culture Profiling in Government |
| קשורות | 3 | 3 |
| תקציר≠ | Public sector leadership assessment is a structured method for measuring the traits, behaviors, competencies and effectiveness of leaders in government and public organizations against an explicit leadership model. It draws on Montgomery Van Wart's influential 2003 synthesis of public-sector leadership theory, which integrated trait, behavioral, transformational and transactional traditions into a model tailored to the constraints of public service, alongside Bernard Bass's foundational work on transformational leadership. The assessment typically uses multi-rater (360-degree) surveys in which leaders, their supervisors, peers and subordinates rate observable behaviors, and the results feed both individual development and organizational leadership-capacity planning. | Organizational culture assessment in the public sector is a structured, survey-based method for diagnosing the dominant values, beliefs and operating assumptions of a government agency or public organization. The most widely used instrument is the Organizational Culture Assessment Instrument (OCAI), grounded in Kim Cameron and Robert Quinn's Competing Values Framework, which maps culture onto two axes — internal versus external focus, and flexibility versus stability — yielding four culture types: clan, adhocracy, market and hierarchy. Respondents rate their organization on each type for both its current and preferred states, producing a culture profile that supports diagnosis and planned change. In public administration the method is adapted to capture the bureaucratic, mission-driven and accountability-laden character of government work. |
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