This course evaluates the primary theories and cross-cultural perspectives on leadership and the respective implications and applications in developing a holistic and international model for leadership. Students will develop a comprehensive philosophy of leadership which also evaluates their assumptions about the nature and knowledge of truth, God, humanity, good and evil, and society and their respective implications for leadership in a global society. Students will also develop a leadership improvement plan that examines their leadership strengths and challenges. Students will evaluate established classics in the leadership genre and various case-studies on leadership. (4 units; As offered & Online)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR702-B
Pearson, MaryAnn
09/03/2024 W 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM BUS ONLN
LDR702-A
Davis, Bryan
09/03/2024 W 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM Park Building ONLN

This course evaluates leadership in context of organizational and institutional environments. Students will develop an in depth understanding of organizational and institutional theory and practices recognizing the unique contribution of both fields in understanding the formal and informal structures and rational and irrational processes in any collective activity. Students will be equipped with multiple perspectives to strategically frame and leverage organizational and institutional policies and practices to promote ethical and desired outcomes. Prerequisite: LDR 702. (4 units; As offered & Online)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR721-A
Shoup, John R.
01/13/2025 W 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM Park Building ONLN

This course evaluates the sociological and cultural aspects associated organizational life and one's own personal and professional development. Students will review various theories of sociology informing organizational structures and interactions. Students will evaluate social and group dynamics of creating and maintaining norms, roles and traditions associated with organizational goals and values. Students will be equipped with the insights and skills to build and maintain an organizational culture of high expectations for optimal performance and facilitate positive change. Prerequisite: LDR 721. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR730-A
Pearson, MaryAnn
05/06/2024 M 7:40 PM - 9:40 PM BUS ONLN
LDR730-A
Pearson, MaryAnn
05/05/2025 W 7:40 PM - 9:40 PM Park Building ONLN

This course evaluates theories on the nature of knowledge, knowledge management, and decision making. Students will evaluate common reasoning fallacies and biases that make for flawed decisions and develop more robust and creative decision making strategies and processes that meet the needs of the situation. Students will develop a comprehensive rubric of principles that allows for effective management of knowledge and decision making. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR740-A
Shoup, John R.
01/13/2025 M 7:40 PM - 9:40 PM Park Building ONLN

This course evaluates various ethical frameworks and worldviews with an emphasis on the Christian worldview in order to promote ethical and virtuous leaders. Students will establish principles for practicing ethical judgments and habits for virtuous and ethical leadership practices. Students will develop a personal heuristic for developing virtues and making ethical decisions that address ethical and moral dilemmas and choices that confront those in leadership positions. Prerequisite: LDR 721. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR750-A
Shoup, John R.
05/06/2024 W 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM BUS ONLN
LDR750-A
Shoup, John R.
05/05/2025 M 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM Park Building ONLN

This course evaluates systems and complexity theories and their respective implications for leadership. Students will explore the rules and patterns that govern all nonlinear and dynamic systems. Students will develop strategies and skills to successfully lead institutions and manage the complexity and chaos associated with leadership in complex environments. Prerequisite: LDR 721. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR760-A
STAFF, STAFF
09/03/2024 M 7:40 PM - 9:40 PM Park Building ONLN

This course explores the history of communication theories and best practices, emphasizing rhetoric. The course will equip leadership students with foundational principles to be skilled leaders who listen actively, write impactfully, and speak excellently. Students will evaluate and hone their abilities to communicate well with internal and external audiences using various platforms to achieve desired organizational and institutional outcomes. (4 units; Spring)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR775-A
Pearson, MaryAnn
01/13/2025 T 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM Park Building ONLN

This course evaluates critical theories and practices associated with recruiting and retaining quality and competent personnel and developing effective teams. Students will gain the knowledge and skills to successfully work with and develop their colleagues to accomplish organizational objectives, with an emphasis on communication, team building and grooming emerging leaders. Students will also develop competencies in managing employee problems and due process. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR780-A
Kiker, Jason D
05/06/2024 W 7:40 PM - 9:40 PM BUS ONLN
LDR780-A
Kiker, Jason D
05/05/2025 M 7:40 PM - 9:40 PM Park Building ONLN

This course evaluates the primary tenets of social (relational) and political (negotiated power) capital and how they create and sustain communities' capacities for individuals and collectives with limited resources and competing interests to thrive. The course explores how networks of relationships and power structures are strategic and tactical assets that moderate leadership outcomes, captured in the familiar aphorism, "It's not what you know; it's who you know that matters." Students will explore leadership from the social and political lens and evaluate how to judiciously create, nurture, and leverage social and political capital to promote human flourishing, optimize the performance of interdependent collectives, and establish just policies. (4 units; Fall)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR785-A
STAFF, STAFF
09/03/2024 W 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM Park Building ONLN

 

This course will focus on introducing students to quantitative and qualitative research methods commonly used in the social sciences as well as key concepts associated with conducting research. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR725-A
Kiker, Jason D
01/13/2025 W 7:40 PM - 9:40 PM Park Building ONLN

This is an intermediate course in inferential statistics focusing on the inferential techniques of hypothesis testing and confidence interval estimation. Topics include descriptive statistics, measures of variability and correlation regression analysis, analysis of variance with an introduction to multiple linear regression. Non-parametric statistics will also be covered. Prerequisite: LDR 725. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR735-A
Kiker, Jason D
05/06/2024 M 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM BUS ONLN
LDR735-A
Kiker, Jason D
05/05/2025 W 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM Park Building ONLN

 

Complete one of the following courses:

This course will focus on qualitative inquiry; participant-observation methods; and qualitative data reduction, and analysis. Prerequisites: LDR 725 and 735. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR745-A
Pearson, MaryAnn
09/03/2024 M 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM Park Building ONLN

This course will focus on advanced quantitative statistical procedures. The course includes but is not limited to procedures such as linear statistical models and regression-based methods for analyzing quantitative data, multivariate statistical procedures, and relevant statistical-analysis packages. Prerequisites: LDR 725 and 735. (4 units; As offered)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR755-A
Kiker, Jason D
09/03/2024 M 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM Park Building ONLN

The doctoral research seminars are designed to groom participants to conduct and evaluate scholarly research and become stewards of an academic discipline. The developmental sequence of seminars equips students with the knowledge and skills to excel as doctoral students and emerging scholars. The seminars culminate in students designing, conducting, and reporting their original research in the form of a dissertation. May be repeated for a maximum of six (6) units. Pass/Fail. (1-2 units; Fall/Spring/Summer)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR795-B
Kiker, Jason D
05/06/2024 - Online
LDR795-D
Kiker, Jason D
05/06/2024 - Online
LDR795-A
Kiker, Jason D
05/06/2024 - Online
LDR795-C
Kiker, Jason D
05/06/2024 - Online
LDR795-E
Kiker, Jason D
05/06/2024 - Online
LDR795-C
Kiker, Jason D
09/03/2024 - Online
LDR795-D
Kiker, Jason D
09/03/2024 - Online
LDR795-B
Kiker, Jason D
09/03/2024 - Online
LDR795-A
Kiker, Jason D
09/03/2024 - Online
LDR795-A
Kiker, Jason D
01/13/2025 - Online
LDR795-B
Kiker, Jason D
05/05/2025 - Online
LDR795-A
Kiker, Jason D
05/05/2025 - Online
LDR795-C
Kiker, Jason D
05/05/2025 - Online
LDR795-D
Kiker, Jason D
05/05/2025 - Online

The one-unit doctoral research seminars are designed to groom students to conduct and evaluate scholarly research and become stewards of an academic discipline. The developmental sequence of seminars equips students with the knowledge and skills to excel as doctoral students and emerging scholars. The seminars culminate in the students designing, conducting, and reporting their original research as a dissertation. May be repeated for a maximum of six (6) units. Pass/Fail. Prerequisite: LDR 795. (1-2 units; Fall/Spring/Summer)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR796-A
Kiker, Jason D
09/03/2024 - Online
LDR796-A
Kiker, Jason D
01/13/2025 - Online

The one-unit doctoral research seminars are designed to groom students to conduct and evaluate scholarly research and become stewards of an academic discipline. The developmental sequence of seminars equips students with the knowledge and skills to excel as doctoral students and emerging scholars. The seminars culminate in the students designing, conducting, and reporting their original research as a dissertation. May be repeated for a maximum of six (6) units. Pass/Fail. Prerequisite: LDR 796. (1-2 units; Fall/Spring/Summer)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR797-A
Kiker, Jason D
09/03/2024 - Online
LDR797-A
Kiker, Jason D
01/13/2025 - Online

The one-unit doctoral research seminars are designed to groom students to conduct and evaluate scholarly research and become stewards of an academic discipline. The developmental sequence of seminars equips students with the knowledge and skills to excel as doctoral students and emerging scholars. The seminars culminate in the students designing, conducting, and reporting their original research as a dissertation. May be repeated for a maximum of twelve (12) units with change in topic. Pass/Fail. Prerequisite: LDR 797. (1-2 units; Fall/Spring/Summer)

InstructorStart DateDaysTimeLocation
LDR798-A
Kiker, Jason D
09/03/2024 - Online
LDR798-A
Kiker, Jason D
01/13/2025 - Online