Early Years of The Ohio State University Studies
Early Years of The Ohio State University Studies
What became the Ohio State Leadership Studies had its beginning in
the Department of Labor in Washington, D.C, before and during World
War II. At that time I left a teaching position at what is now Michigan
State University to become director of an extensive multidisciplinary
occupational research program involving job and process analysis in
over 25,000 civilian establishments and army and air corps military
organizations. We developed and published occupational descriptions, a
dictionary of occupational titles, occupational standardized aptitude and
trade tests, tables of occupational and organizational composition, lists
of essential occupations, and definitions of critical and non-essential
civilian occupations for military draft deferment (Shartle, 1961; Shartle
& Dvorak, 1943).
That was interesting and well-received workin fact it has continued
to this daybut for some of us we omitted the most exciting aspect of an
organizational activity, namely the "top side." We covered two levels of
supervisors and foremen in business and industry and the noncommissioned army officer specialties, but never the higher levels
where the most significant decisions were being made. We had plenty to
do as it was. The Dictionary of Occupational Titles was in itself a huge
undertaking.
The National Research Council Committee on the Classification of
Military Personnel, chaired by Walter V. Bingham, often spoke of the
gap and we engaged a fellow member, Henry Garrett, then Head of the
Psychology Department at Columbia University, to chair a
Correspondence and requests for reprints should be sent to Carroll L. Shartle, 218 Leland Avenue,
Columbus. Ohio 43214.
Copyright 1979 by the Southern Management Association 0149-2063/79/00S2-0I27$2.00/0
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keep on going for one never knew when a fellow like this might be useful.
This officer did receive good indoctrination, was favorably impressed
with the research, and later as a senator and then president was helpful
too.
Our assistant manpower director for the Twin Cities area was a bright
pohtical scientist and fast-learner named Hubert Humphrey. His style
included extensive verbal output and years later he was very helpful to us
as a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee. My favorite in
leadership style was General George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff, and
later Secretary of Defense, Secretary of State, well known for the
Marshall Plan. His administrative pattern was as near ideal as any I had
seen or have seen since.
In observing the way things were being done in what Eisenhower later
called the Military-Industrial Complex, it was obvious to me that an
extended research program on high level jobs and organizational
behavior was called for. In my own case, I had nine different chiefs in 4/2
years. By the time we had trained one, and he found out what was going
on, he moved. Most were competent and looked good on paper, but for
one reason or another did not stay. Some quit; others were eased out or
kicked upstairs, sometimes with my helpful strategy. I was a successful
bureaucrat: I survived. Furthermore, I began with two assistants and
ended 10 years later with over 200 positions in Washington and an
estimated 500 more in the field on other budgets.
Abihty to handle stress was a factor in my survival. In fact, the
Washington Post and two cabinet members at the same time wanted me
fired. FDR did not budge. He had dismissed two cabinet members
previously, and had replaced them with Republicans, for greater
national unity, one week before the Repubhcan National Convention in
1940. That caused a ruckus in both political parties.
Because we had to consider thousands of deferment requests, I
devised a rating system to quantify degrees of criticalness. The
Chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee was incensed by it
and claimed to the press that I was breaking the law. I later changed one
item to stay out of jail.
Organizational changes were often made to correct a problem but
usually resulted in creating new problems. I was involved in 21 of them.
Of equal importance, informal and sometimes devious means of
influence within the power structure were often important. Ability to
present budget requests to congressional committees as well as the
budget bureau was critical and some of my freshmen bosses fell down
miserably.
Feeling that the federal government was not a good place to initiate
and receive support for a multidisciplinary study of leadership, I looked
around for a university setting. I preferred a large state university
because of potentially larger support base. Ohio State was interested
among others. Since I already knew something about Ohio State, as
one might expect, I chose it.
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study leadership in business, governmental, and educational organizations. I began alone in an insurance company, using a job analysis
and organizational analysis format modified from what I had used in the
government. Ralph Stogdill was the first to come aboard in a segment
supported for many years by the Office of Naval Research. Ralph and I
initiated the field work by studying the top structure of the tenth Naval
district. Ralph also finished his first publication on personal factors
associated with leadership which was pubhshed in 1948 and wellreceived (Stogdill, 1948).
With additional foundation, business, and governmental support we
enlarged our group to include among others John Hemphill, Lawrence
Siegal, Donald T. Campbell, Andrew Halpin, Alvin Coons, Melvin
Seeman, Pauline Pepinsky, and various paid and unpaid consultants.
Drawn in later were Robert Wherry, Harold Burtt, and Harold Pepinsky.
There were many very promising graduate students including Bernie
Bass and Ed Fleishman, also Ellis Scott, Ed Harris, Bill Jaynes, Ben
Winer, Charlotte Christner, Ruben Shevits, C. G. Browne, Robert Stoltz,
Jon Bentz, Ralph Canter, Carl Rush, William Pavhc, Lorraine Eyde,
Charles Weste, Bob Hites, Frank Michaelson, Margaret Estep, and
Richard Morris. Karl Weick and Bob House came along later to enrich
the graduate program.
Although I startled the university administration at the onset by saying
we required a million dollars for a 10-year program to study leadership,
the base support was favorable and aided us in getting outside grants.
After we were well started I was invited to explain the program to
University Board of Trustees. Much to my surprise the only trustee with a
research background made quite a fuss. He was C. F. Kettering,
distinguished graduate of our College of Engineering and at that time
Vice President for Research at General Motors, who was best known for
his invention of the automobile self-starter. Mr. Kettering said that our
method was all wrong; that a high level executive was like a spark coil.
He started things, and moved quickly back and forth from one problem
situation to another. The fact that we were quantifying our data was a
mistake; we should limit ourselves to case histories. I learned
subsequently that he had given support to the Harvard Graduate School
of Business. That explained it. I had later correspondence with Mr.
Kettering, but he remained unconvinced that quantification of data was a
viable step although he favored having engineers take more psychology
to broaden their training base.
Our initial research planning group was from psychology, sociology,
and economics with various sessions including business organization,
educational research, public administration, and industrial engineering.
There were many, many sessions over the first two-year period. In these
group meetings I made the coffee, smoked my pipe, and tried to listen
rather than talk. Finally a model was developed that we called a
paradigm. One of our off-campus consultants labeled it a hypothesis
factory.
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Shartle, C. L., & Dvorak, B. J. Occupational analysis activities in the War Manpower
Commission. Psychological Bulletin, 1943, 40, 701-713.
Stogdill, R. M. Personal factors associated with leadership: A survey of the literature.
Journal of Psychology, 1948, 25, 35-71.
Stogdill, R. M. Individual Behavior and group achievement. New York: Oxford University Press, 1959.
Stogdill, R. M. Handbook of Leadership. New York: Free Press, 1974.
Stogdill, R. M., & Coons, A. E. (Eds.) Leader behavior: Its description and measurement. Columbus: Bureau Business Research Monograph No. 88, Ohio State University, 1957.