Introduction
The mission of agricultural education included charges to develop abilities in effective leadership as early as 1976 (Brown & Fritz, 1994). In 1989 the Strategic Plan for Agricultural Education identified the need to “amplify and expand the whole person concept of education, including leadership” (National Summit on Agricultural Education, 1989, p. 4). It is a charge of agricultural education to provide leadership education (Brown & Fritz, 1994).
According to Gardner (1990), leadership at all levels in society needs to be developed. Kouzes and Posner (1987; 1988) indicated that leadership is an observable, learnable set of practices, and effective leaders are constantly looking for ways to improve themselves and their departments. Universities have recognized the need and benefits that formal leadership instruction can offer in the classroom and in extracurricular programs (Hays, 1999).
Post-secondary institutions are fulfilling the need for leadership development via curricular and co–curricular offerings, and often leadership development and education is found in departments of agriculture (Fritz & Brown, 1998). The content of leadership courses hinges on several important considerations: (a) students’ comfort level with the concept of leadership, (b) identification of leadership elements, (c) acceptance of leadership as a process, (d) greater awareness of the practice of leadership, (e) establishment of leadership purpose, (f) development of a personal leadership approach, (g) enhancement of analytical skills, and (h) sharing new and emerging leadership theories (Lewis, 1995; Watt, 1995; Wren, 1994). Leadership education also encompasses agricultural educators who recognize the need to implement strategies to be leaders and effectively educate students to develop into leaders who possess the ability to effectively guide and direct future industry (Birkenholz & Schumacher, 1993). Leadership by its nature is multidisciplinary and leadership education often flows over into other disciplines. In the National Research Agenda [NRA]: Agricultural Education and Communication, 2007–2010, leadership education is identified as one of the five integrated specialization areas that drive agricultural education today (Osborne, n.d.).
Leadership scholars have warned organizations to ensure their survival in rapidly changing times by becoming learning– or knowledge–based organizations that foster growth and creativity (Bridges, 1996; Senge, 1990). Successful organizations in the 21st century will be discernible by their ability to learn together (Senge, 1990). The changing organizational structure of higher education relies on greater faculty input and reflection in decision-making (Ellsworth & Iorizzo, 2001). Because departments of agricultural education are the major academic area that provides leadership education, it is important to understand areas of research occurring in leadership education and how this integrated specialization area supports the context of agricultural education. This research discussion will focus primarily on that academic area of leadership education and its impact on agricultural education.
Since the 1990s rapid growth in research and publishing activities under the broad umbrella of agricultural education has resulted in enormous growth of agricultural literature (Radhakrishna & Jackson, 1995). New research outlets have been created. The Journal of Leadership Education (JOLE) was created in 2002. Mannebach (1990) indicated that changes have occurred at an unprecedented rate in agricultural education. Research needs to be conducted regarding leadership education needs in agricultural education to prioritize future research, training, and development (Spotanski & Carter, 1993). With many leadership education programs housed in university departments of agricultural education, it is increasingly important to find ways to collaborate with and within these units while strengthening our own unique research agendas.
Previously, Newcomb (1993) recognized the need for increasing collaborations in agricultural education. He encouraged universities to broaden programs by offering leadership education, agricultural communications, extension education, and international development, and further add depth to teacher education programs. It seems natural that if leadership units are housed in agricultural education departments that initiatives should be formed to incorporate leadership development and education courses into agricultural education programs.
However, if leadership education research is not perceived to be at a level equal to agricultural education research, it may be challenging to further form and build successful collaborations in the five integrated specialization areas outlined in the NRA (e.g., agricultural communications, agricultural leadership, extension and outreach education, agricultural education in university and postsecondary settings, and school-based agricultural education). The NRA was created as a guide for developing futuristic research (Osborne, n.d.). Yet, how can we be sure where we are headed with research, and if the direction is adequate and appropriate, if we are unclear as to where we have been?
The need for this research is grounded in research by several individuals. Knight (1984) posited that a discipline’s journals and magazines are good indicators of research priorities in the discipline. Radhakrishna and Xu (1997) found that research journal articles are indicators of the profession’s scientific activity, philosophy, and application. Ball and Knobloch (2005) indicated that it is critical for practitioners to examine the knowledge base of the field to allow the profession to reflect upon actions and ultimately improve the discipline. Crunkilton (1988) identified the need for agricultural researchers to know where research can and should go in the pursuit to develop empirical knowledge. Doerfert (2003), Tucker (2004), and Whiting (2002) called on researchers to examine their discipline, focus research, create cohesion, and develop goal- oriented visions. Miller, Stewart, and West (2006) identified the need to review literature to maintain a clear sense of the discipline’s research agenda. Baker, Shinn, and Briers (2007) indicated the need to examine core knowledge objects and knowledge domains to advance research. The expressed need to focus disciplines, examine their knowledge base, and review their literature creates a need to examine research in leadership education and the other integrated specialization areas as outlined in the NRA.
Due to the infancy of JOLE, it is imperative to incorporate a holistic examination of the critical components of leadership education research. This examination will allow the discipline to deepen its understanding of the current state of research and take a futuristic approach to knowledge pursuit, creation, and examination. The integrated specialization area of leadership education can examine many components: research theme areas, variety in research theme areas by year, prolifically-published authors, and types of research being conducted. Because a discipline’s journals are indicators of research priorities (Knight, 1984), by analyzing research journal articles it should be possible to analyze dimensions of leadership education in JOLE. The review of literature failed to identify content analysis studies previously completed in leadership areas of focusing and research publishing. However, these studies have been popular in other disciplines, including agricultural education. Understanding research occurring in leadership education can assist the agricultural education discipline and other integrated specialization areas in identifying previous literary contexts, and determining if past research initiatives are fulfilling research needs as identified in the NRA. This study assisted in the creation of a leadership education research baseline by determining the experience-base of research occurring in JOLE.
Conceptual Framework
The future of leadership education depends on many variables, and the application and acquisition of new knowledge via research is extremely important (Dyer, Haase-Wittler, & Washburn, 2003). Yet, the quality of research in agricultural education, including the integrated specialization area of leadership education, has been questioned for decades. In some cases it has been identified as inferior to other disciplines (Buriak & Shinn, 1993; Dyer et al., 2003; Radhakrishna & Xu, 1997; Silva-Guerrero & Sutphin, 1990; Warmbrod, 1986).
The conceptual framework of this study (see Figure 1) was grounded in work by scholars in five integrated specialization areas associated with agricultural education. Several researchers have completed various components of journal analysis in agricultural education: familiarity and quality of journals and importance of faculty publishing (Edgar, Edgar, Briers, & Rutherford, 2008; Miller et al., 2006; Radhakrishna, 1995; Radhakrishna & Jackson, 1993); research theme areas (Buriak & Shinn, 1993; Dyer et al., 2003; Edgar et al., 2008; Miller, Stewart, & West, 2006; Moore, 1991; Radhakrishna & Xu, 1997; Silva-Guerrero & Sutphin, 1990); prolific authors (Harder & Roberts, 2006; Radhakrishna & Jackson, 1995; Radhakrishna, Jackson, & Eaton, 1992); and statistical methods used (Bowen, Rollins, Baggett, & Miller, 1990; Dyer et al., 2003; Mannenbach, McKenna, & Pfau, 1984).
This study examined articles with research methodologies published in JOLE from its inception in 2002 to 2006. The study assessed primary and secondary research theme areas, authorship, and research methods and types. This research is the first step in identifying a research experience-base framework in leadership education using the premier leadership education journal as identified in a field study. Conceptually, this research examined leadership education with respect to its role in agricultural education. The experience-base gained from this research can then be used as a framework to suggest future research strategies when compared to the NRA.
Figure 1
Conceptual base of the study
Ag Comm
Internat’l Ag
Leadership Education
Extension Education
Teacher Education
Agricultural Education Discipline
Scholarship
CONCEPTUAL MODEL
Published Research Journal Articles
Agricultural Education
Experience-Base of Research
Content Analysis
Research Methods
Prolific Authors
Research Themes
Purpose and Objectives
The purposes of this study, which were part of a larger study, were to review research published in the JOLE from 2002 to 2006 to examine the status of the journal to provide a base from which to direct future research. JOLE is a research journal with authors who are university and college faculty-based as well as practitioner-based. The specific objective was to describe and synthesize published research in JOLE during the five-year period by (a) identifying primary and secondary research themes in published research articles, (b) identifying primary and secondary research theme areas among research articles published by year, (c) identifying the most prolific authors, and (d) identifying research methods and designs.
Research Methods and Procedures
This study employed a mixed-methods content analysis design. Content analysis as a research method has existed for decades, and the best content-analytic studies use mixed-methods methodology (Weber, 1990). Content analysis can be used to give researchers insight into problems or hypotheses that can then be tested by more direct methods. Content analysis is a systematic, replicable technique for compressing many words of text into fewer content categories based on explicit rules of coding (Berelson, 1952; Krippendorf, 1980; Weber, 1990).
Content validity was maintained using both previous research as a guide and a field study to focus the research. Baker, Shinn, and Briers (2007) identified 104 individuals as active agricultural education research authors. A field questionnaire was developed and sent to 96 of those authors with valid email addresses. The contacted authors were asked to identify premier journals and to validate or add to research theme categories. Research theme categories were created based on previous content analyses of journals in the specialization areas of leadership education, teacher education, extension education, international agricultural education, and agricultural communications. These categories were provided to the pilot study. It was the respondents’ responsibility to compress or expound on research theme areas. The pilot study identified 37 research theme areas for the five integrated specialization areas identified in the NRA. Dillman’s (2000) Tailored Design Method was used. Sixty-two of the 96 possible respondents completed the questionnaire, yielding a 65% response rate.
The JOLE was identified as a premier journal in agricultural education by 42% of the respondents. JOLE was noted as the premier journal for the specialization area of leadership education and articles with research methodologies from 2002 to 2006 were analyzed. The main focus of each article (knowledge-base) was coded as the primary research theme area. The most prevalent supporting theme (conceptual-base) was identified as the secondary theme of each article. The principal investigator and a peer independently reviewed the material and formed a checklist of information required during the review of each journal article. The researchers compared notes and reconciled differences on their initial checklists via negotiations. Researchers used a consolidated checklist to independently apply coding. The researchers then checked for agreement in coding. If reliability was not acceptable then the previous steps were repeated. Once reliability had been established the coding was applied on a large-scale basis. The final stage was a periodic quality control check (Weber, 1990). Inter-coder reliability was completed with at least 10% overlap for the reliability test. Final reliability was calculated using a random sample of 5% of the analyzed articles. Reliability was assessed using Spearman’s rho. Reliabilities met or exceeded the minimum standard of .70 (Bowen et al., 1990; Tuckman, 1999).
Findings
There were 45 JOLE articles that met the selection criteria for analysis. Primary research themes identified are shown in Table 1. There were 17 primary research themes identified in the five-year content analysis. The most frequently identified primary research theme was leadership development (31.1%). The second most frequent primary research theme was leadership education (24.4%). Additionally, those primary research theme areas identified in research articles occurring 6.7% or less are identified in the table.
Table 1 Primary Research Themes |
||
Research Theme |
f |
P |
Leadership Development |
14 |
31.1 |
Leadership Education |
11 |
24.4 |
Service and Experiential Learning |
3 |
6.7 |
Youth Leadership and Development |
3 |
6.7 |
Volunteer Development and Leadership |
2 |
4.4 |
Academic Programs |
1 |
2.2 |
Career Development and Assessment |
1 |
2.2 |
Communication Management |
1 |
2.2 |
Diffusion of Innovation |
1 |
2.2 |
Evaluation |
1 |
2.2 |
Formal and Informal Teaching Approaches |
1 |
2.2 |
Instructional and Program Delivery |
||
Approaches |
1 |
2.2 |
Leadership Management |
1 |
2.2 |
Needs Assessment |
1 |
2.2 |
Professional Development |
1 |
2.2 |
Research (methods and models) |
1 |
2.2 |
Teacher Preparation and Competence |
1 |
2.2 |
(N = 45) |
Secondary research themes identified are displayed in Table 2. There were 23 secondary research theme areas identified. The most frequently identified secondary research theme area was leadership education (17.8%). The second most frequently identified secondary research theme areas were academic programs and leadership development (8.9%). Additionally, those secondary research themes identified 6.7% or less is identified in the table.
Table 2 Secondary Research Themes |
||
Research Theme |
f |
P |
Leadership Education |
8 |
17.8 |
Academic Programs |
4 |
8.9 |
Leadership Development |
4 |
8.9 |
Evaluation |
3 |
6.7 |
Organizational Development and |
||
Leadership |
3 |
6.7 |
Accountability |
2 |
4.4 |
Diversity (culture, ethnicity, gender) |
2 |
4.4 |
Formal and Informal Teaching Approaches |
2 |
4.4 |
Skill Development and Competencies |
2 |
4.4 |
Table 2 (continued) |
||
Research Theme |
f |
P |
Youth Leadership and Development |
2 |
4.4 |
Career Development and Assessment |
1 |
2.2 |
Community Development and Leadership |
1 |
2.2 |
Critical Thinking |
1 |
2.2 |
Curriculum and Program Development |
1 |
2.2 |
Framing |
1 |
2.2 |
Globalization and Internationalization |
1 |
2.2 |
Information Sources and Technology |
1 |
2.2 |
Instructional and Program Delivery |
||
Approaches |
1 |
2.2 |
Leadership Management |
1 |
2.2 |
Needs Assessment |
1 |
2.2 |
Processes, Principles, and Styles of |
||
Learning |
1 |
2.2 |
Quality of Life and Life Skills |
1 |
2.2 |
Volunteer Development and Leadership |
1 |
2.2 |
(N = 45) |
Table 3 shows the most frequently occurring primary research themes by year. In addition, theme details, frequencies, and percentages are reported in the table.
Table 3
Most Identified Primary Research Themes
Year |
Research Theme |
n |
F |
P |
2002 |
Leadership Education |
11 |
5 |
45.5 |
2003 |
Leadership Development |
5 |
2 |
40.0 |
2004 |
Leadership Development |
11 |
4 |
36.4 |
2005 |
Leadership Development |
11 |
4 |
36.4 |
2006 |
Leadership Education |
12 |
5 |
41.7 |
(N = 45)
Table 4 outlines the frequently used secondary research themes identified by year. In addition, theme details, frequencies, and percentages are reported in the table.
Table 4
Most Identified Secondary Research Themes
Year |
Research Theme |
n |
f |
P |
|
2002 |
Academic Programs |
(2- |
|||
way tie) |
|||||
2003 |
Leadership Education Diversity (culture, ethnicity, gender) |
(5- |
11 |
2 |
18.2 |
way tie)
Globalization and Internationalization Leadership Education
Needs Assessment Organizational Development and
Leadership |
5 |
1 |
20.0 |
|
2004 |
Leadership Education |
11 |
2 |
18.2 |
2005 |
Leadership Education |
11 |
2 |
18.2 |
2006 |
Leadership Education |
12 |
3 |
25.0 |
(N = 45)
The prolific authors identified in JOLE are identified in Table 5. No distinction was made between lead and supporting authorship. There were 83 authors (duplicated count) identified in the 45 articles. Christine Townsend was the most prolific author in the journal, authoring or co-authoring 4 of the 45 articles (8.9%). Additional prolific JOLE authors are identified in the table.
Table 5
Prolific Authorship
Author
P of
P of
f Authors Articles
Townsend, Christine D. |
4 |
4.8 |
8.9 |
Crawford, C. B. |
3 |
3.6 |
6.7 |
Fritz, Susan M. |
3 |
3.6 |
6.7 |
Hoover, Tracy S. |
3 |
3.6 |
6.7 |
Barbuto, John E., Jr. |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
Bruce, Jacklyn A. |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
Culp, Kenneth, III |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
Dooley, Kim E. |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
McCormick, Michael J. |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
Rohs, Frederick R |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
Strohkirch, C. Sue |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
Webster, Nicole S. |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
White, Belinda Johnson |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
Williams, Jennifer R. |
2 |
2.4 |
4.4 |
(N of Authors = 83, N of Articles = 45)
Research methods used in JOLE were identified. Quantitative research methods were the most common at 64.4% (29 out of 45 articles) followed by qualitative in 28.9% (13 out of 45 articles). The least often used research methods were mixed qualitative and quantitative methods (6.7%; 3 out of 45 articles). Research designs used in the 45 analyzed articles are outlined in Table 6. Historical designs were the most frequently used research design (20.0%). Surveys were used in 15.6% of the published analyzed research. Additional research designs and procedures are identified in the table.
Table 6 Research Method Types Used |
|
Method Type f |
P |
Historical 9 |
20.0 |
Surveys 7 |
15.6 |
Correlation 5 |
11.1 |
Experimental 5 |
11.1 |
Evaluation 5 |
11.1 |
Case Study 3 |
6.7 |
Content Analysis 2 |
4.4 |
Interviews 2 |
4.4 |
Open-ended Questions/Reflections 2 |
4.4 |
Holistic 1 |
2.2 |
Interviews with Referential Adequacy 1 |
2.2 |
Material Interviews and Observations 1 |
2.2 |
Observations and Document Analysis 1 |
2.2 |
Survey and Focus Groups 1 |
2.2 |
(N = 45) |
|
Conclusions |
The Journal of Leadership Education was identified as a premier journal for reporting leadership education research in the agricultural education discipline. Research in JOLE is adding to the scope and topography of discovery occurring in the field. In research articles published, variety in research theme areas was seen. The breadth of research theme areas identified appear to contribute to a lack of continuity in discovery with 17 research themes identified as primary themes, and 23 research themes identified as secondary themes in the 45 analyzed articles.
Leadership development was the most frequent primary research theme. While leadership education dominated both research theme areas, both in category and by year. Secondary research theme variety was seen in 2002 and 2003; however, leadership education dominated from 2004 to 2006. Research themes were cyclic moving between primary and secondary and moving out of primary and secondary for a time before cycling back in. An example of this phenomenon is the theme area “leadership education.” It is seen as the most frequent primary and secondary research theme in 2002. Then it is the most frequent secondary theme in 2003 through 2006 and, again, as the most frequent primary theme in 2006.
These apparent research cycles may be indicators of the breadth of research occurring in the field. But are they indicators of research depth? Frequent research themes may be indicators of what leadership educators’ value in terms of research priorities. Few researchers contribute programmatically or consistently to leadership education research as seen in JOLE. Christine Townsend reported research in slightly less than one article per year and others much less. JOLE is a research journal with authors who are faculty- and practitioner-based; yet, research publications in JOLE are clearly dominated by faculty rather than practitioners. Unlike other research journals in the agricultural education field, JOLE does not require membership for publication acceptance. This may have implications for the journal because anyone can publish in the journal and may contribute to a reduction in author domination. Quantitative research employing historical methods were most prevalent in leadership education. Based on research methods and designs, leadership education research lacks diversity of research methodologies and scope and, perhaps, depth and quality if one assumes that depth and quality are indicated by methods that move toward cause and effect relationships.
This study was an attempt to establish an experience-base in research occurring in leadership education. It is critical to create an experience-base in order to complete a comprehensive and holistic examination of a benchmark, such as the NRA. Ball and Knobloch (2005) and others have indicated the explicit need to improve the agricultural education discipline, and leadership education research adds to the discipline. We must make every effort to understand how the field of leadership education affects agricultural education.
Discussion and Implications
Baker, Shinn, and Briers (2007) issued a specific call to examine the knowledge domains of agricultural education. Miller, Stewart, and West (2006) identified the need to review literature to maintain a clear sense of the discipline’s research agenda. Doerfert (2003), Tucker (2004), and Whiting (2002) outlined the need for creating research focus, cohesion, and goal-oriented vision. This study was an attempt to assist with each of the above identified areas. The frame for this research focused on leadership education’s role in agricultural education.
This research identified variety in research theme areas when looking at the minimal number of published research articles in JOLE (23 within the five years covered). Excessive variety in research themes may be due to leadership educators’ and researchers’ attempts to find their place. Although leadership education and development as academic programs and research are expanding, leadership education programs and research have struggled to find a home in academic units and research agendas. Leadership education may still be searching to find where it fits in the context of agricultural education and the many different facets of leadership. Many faculty contributing research to JOLE are not housed in academic units or universities associated with agriculture. However, JOLE was identified as a premier journal in the agricultural education discipline. Although leadership education programs have increased, over the previous two decades, in academic units, the discipline still has relatively few faculty members conducting research in surfeit contextual- and knowledge-base areas based on the JOLE analysis. Leadership is a broad topic area with relatively few faculty members attempting to cover the numerous research priority areas outlined for the discipline. Although leadership faculty and practitioners are adding to research breadth, it is unclear how research theme area variety is affecting discipline depth. It is also highly likely that JOLE is not the only premier leadership education journal, but it was identified in this study as a premier journal.
Furthermore, this research discovered that relatively few researchers add consistently to the scope and topography of leadership education research as revealed by the fact that no author dominated the journal. Because researchers bring with them a variety of interests in both research topics and strategies, this finding is an important component in research stability and diversity. Would leadership educators and researchers benefit from prolific authors assisting graduate students, new faculty, and practitioners interested in developing and producing personal research initiatives? Can we better utilize prolific authors by highlighting their areas of expertise and using them as specialists? Would this allow us to move from a generalist approach in examining knowledge to becoming research area (theme) experts?
Knight (1984) and Radhakrishna and Xu (1997) noted that published research journal articles are indicators of the profession’s current state. Although this research supports Knight and Radhakrishna and Xu, it also provides a note of caution and an evident need for more variety in research methodology and design in leadership education research. The findings of this study indicate that a majority of research in leadership education used historical and survey research methods. If research published in the JOLE over the past five years is indicative of all research in leadership education then there is a clear need to focus research themes while improving and diversifying methodological research strategies beyond historical and survey research. Criticisms have been made regarding research rigor and diversity in agricultural education; leadership education is often grouped in this field of study, and its research may be contributing to those critiques. There is a need to engage in more rigorous research methodologies to answer the “why” in addition to the “what is” questions.
In 1993 Newcomb identified the need to transform university agricultural education programs and encouraged universities to broaden programs by offering leadership, extension education, agricultural communications, and international development, and to add depth to teacher education programs. As faculty members in leadership education continue to forge new alliances and integrations with agricultural education, it is clear that our research must be at or above the current level of research in agricultural education. This study was a first step in determining the current state of research in leadership education. This research attempted to outline research priorities, strategies, and designs used in research articles published during JOLE’s first five years of publication. This research also calls for a comparison of the identified experience-base to a futuristic framework, such as the National Research Agenda: Agricultural Education and Communication, 2007–2010 (Osborne, n.d.). Although research work in leadership education feeds into multiple leadership journals, our peers and others associated with agricultural education identified JOLE as a premier journal. If these individuals are looking at JOLE to assess our current level of research productivity and rigor, would they be pleased?
Recommendations
The Journal of Leadership Education should expand the breadth and number of researchers consistently publishing research articles. The journal might create more thematic issues to reduce research fragmentation. It should also strive to increase participation in publishing to increase the number of research articles in each issue. Leadership education as a profession and as practice must continue to reflect upon those actions that ultimately improve the field. It is imperative that professionals in leadership education improve research methodologies while increasing continuity in research theme areas. This study calls for future research to examine the essence of leadership education and its role in the agricultural education discipline. It is imperative for us to understand if today’s research is adding to the depth of our “well” of research and not merely to its breadth. Our research should strive for depth, richness, and impact. We must continue to deepen our “well” of knowledge and not just expand our “pool.” As an area of practice, do we have the volume and quality of theoretical underpinnings and fundamental works needed to support us as we expand the broadness of our “well?” Or do we need to continue to move deeper before we expand in width? Reflections regarding efforts to improve and diversify the discipline must continue. Additional research must be completed to determine if research themes identified in this study are covering all needs within the discipline. Broader research themes would assist leadership education in determining how research is incorporated into agricultural education and other specialized integration areas, as well as in other disciplines and research initiatives. It might also be important to determine what other disciplines/areas are addressing leadership education and invite them to submit publications to JOLE.
A pattern appears to exist in the primary and secondary research themes identified in this study. Further research should be conducted to determine the degrees of research theme cycles, meaningfulness of cycles, and how cycles affect leadership education both as an area of scholarship and as an area of practice. Leadership education researchers must diversify their methodological research portfolios to include variety in research methods and designs. Additional research should be completed to determine the depth and rigor of historical and survey methods used in our research. Research must continue to determine whether current research methodologies are serving the leadership education and the agricultural education disciplines, in an effort to advance its scholarship. Further research must be completed to provide methods and standards for exceptional and rigorous research in leadership education.
Reflections regarding efforts to improve and integrate leadership education into agricultural education departments or units must continue. Additional research must be completed to determine the level of breadth and depth of research themes identified in this study as well as how and if these themes are affecting research occurring in the integrated specialization area of leadership education. Current leadership education research (experience-base) must be compared to emerging research priorities for leadership education. By using a benchmark, such as the National Research Agenda, leadership education can better determine if previous research is supporting emerging research priority areas and determine where adjustments must be made.
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