232
edits
No edit summary |
|||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
== Adjective, Occupation, Name == | == Adjective, Occupation, Name == | ||
https://twitter.com/ericrweinstein/status/955117591378329606?lang=en | https://twitter.com/ericrweinstein/status/955117591378329606?lang=en | ||
== Agency == | |||
Bandura (2009a) defined human agency as “the human capability to exert influence over one’s functioning and the course of events by one’s actions” (p. 8). “Through cognitive self-guidance, humans can visualize futures that act on the present; construct, evaluate, and modify alternative courses of action to gain valued outcomes; and override environmental influences” (p. 8). “To be an agent is to influence intentionally one’s functioning and life circumstances” (Bandura, 2008c, p. 16). | |||
Four core properties of human agency were described in Bandura (2006b, pp. 164-165) They are (a) intentionality, (b) forethought, (c) self-reactiveness, and (d) self-reflection. Intentionality deals with the forming of intentions that “include action plans and strategies for realizing them” (Bandura, 2009a, p. 8). [https://principlesoflearning.wordpress.com/dissertation/chapter-3-literature-review-2/the-human-perspective/an-agentic-theory-of-the-self-bandura-1997/ Source] | |||
== Agentic Leadership == | == Agentic Leadership == |