Abstract

Academics exert themselves tremendously to advance in higher education institutions, and their leaders’ emotional intelligence and idealised influence are fundamental to responsiveness regarding performance. The effects of transformational leadership on job performance have been established, but a single component, idealised influence, has been neglected. Hence, this study aims to investigate the potential mediating effects of academic leaders’ idealised influence between academic leaders’ emotional intelligence and subordinates’ job performance. Approximately 386 questionnaires from five Malaysian public research universities were obtained. The partial least squares structural equation model was utilised in dichotomising the measurements. Drawing from attribution theory and social exchange theory, it was predicted that academic leaders’ idealised influence will mediate the relationship between academic leaders’ emotional intelligence and their subordinates’ job performance. However, the study reveals that the relationship between academic leaders’ emotional intelligence and their subordinates’ job performance was not mediated by academic leaders’ idealised influence. This study is useful for government and higher institutions in planning, developing, and implementing programs or policies in producing highly talented academic leaders in Malaysian research universities.

Highlights

  • The Ministry of Higher Education has launched the National Strategic Plan for Higher Education for 2010-2020 and the 11th Malaysia Plan Malaysia, Higher Education Blueprint (2015-2025)

  • Multicollinearity can be determined through the variance inflation factor (VIF)

  • A high multicollinearity among constructs would create an unstable evaluation and would make it hard to isolate the impact of the individual dimensions on the construct (Petter et al, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

The Ministry of Higher Education has launched the National Strategic Plan for Higher Education for 2010-2020 and the 11th Malaysia Plan Malaysia, Higher Education Blueprint (2015-2025) These strategic plans focus on teaching and learning quality, expanding access to education and quality improvement, enhancing research and innovation, embracing technology and improving service delivery efficiency at the ministry level. To welcome this new era, Malaysia’s higher education and especially public universities should focus on strategies which provide greater sustainability, visibility management and talents towards education 4.0. The Malaysian government provided RM 400 million to empower five research universities in the 2019 budget (Basir, 2018) This was to ensure that each research university could continue to produce high-quality inventions and research results. The Malaysian government has allocated an additional RM524 million in the 2020 budget to various ministries and public agencies to intensify research and development in the public sector, signifying the importance of Malaysian research universities in research and development

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