| Literature DB >> 32434553 |
Ibeawuchi K Enwereuzor1, Ike E Onyishi2, Florence Chiji Albi-Oparaocha3, Kenneth Amaeshi4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Scandalous incidents occurring in prominent organisations in the world have brought to limelight the role of leaders in shaping the ethical climate of their organisations. As a result, several studies across different organisational/occupational contexts and climes have examined and unanimously proven that ethical leadership was positively related to ethical climate. However, there is rarely any of these studies that was conducted in teaching context. Besides, the mechanisms involved between ethical leadership and ethical climate seems not to have been addressed in literature. Thus, this paper reports the findings of a study that investigated the mediating role of perceived leader integrity in the ethical leadership-ethical climate relationship among teachers.Entities:
Keywords: Ethical climate; Ethical leadership; Head teacher; Leader; Organisation; Perceived leader integrity; School; Teaching context
Year: 2020 PMID: 32434553 PMCID: PMC7238651 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-020-00420-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychol ISSN: 2050-7283
Fig. 1Hypothesized model of perceived leader integrity as a mediator between ethical leadership and ethical climate
Means, standard deviations, and correlations
| Variable | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gender | – | – | – | ||||||
| 2 | Marital status | – | – | – | – | |||||
| 3 | Job position | – | – | −.17** | .40*** | – | ||||
| 4 | Education | – | – | −.04 | .31*** | .53*** | – | |||
| 5 | Age | – | – | −.07 | .40*** | .37*** | .29*** | – | ||
| 6 | Ethical leadership | 38.09 | 8.17 | .06 | .01 | .07 | .08 | −.02 | – | |
| 7 | PLI | 107.98 | 17.64 | −.12* | −.01 | .12* | .02 | .01 | .25*** | – |
| 8 | Ethical climate | 67.72 | 10.96 | −.10 | −.13* | −.06 | −.01 | .02 | .42*** | .25*** |
N = 336, * = p < .05 (2-tailed), ** = p < .01 (2-tailed), *** = p < .001 (2-tailed). PLI Perceived leader integrity. Gender was coded 0 = male, 1 = female; marital status: 0 = single, 1 = married; job position: 0 = junior staff, 1 = senior staff; education: 1 = teacher training, 2 = secondary school, 3 = OND/NCE, 4 = HND/bachelor degree, 5 = postgraduate degree, such that higher scores indicated higher educational qualification. Age was coded 1 = < 25 years, 2 = 25–40 years, 3 = 41–56 years, 4 = > 56, with higher scores representing older age
Simple mediation from ethical leadership to perceived leader integrity to ethical climate
| Pathway | Estimate | SE | BC 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | ||||
| EL ➝ PLI | .552 | .114 | .328 | .776 | < . 001 |
| PLI ➝ EC | .091 | .031 | .030 | .153 | = .004 |
| EL ➝ EC | .529 | .067 | .396 | .662 | < . 001 |
| EL ➝ PLI ➝ EC | .050 | .026 | .005 | .106 | |
BC bootstrapping results were based on 5000 bootstrapped samples
SE Standard error, BC Bias corrected, CI Confidence interval, EL Ethical leadership, PLI Perceived leader integrity, EC Ethical climate