Assignment

Digital Leadership (DL)

Andy Weeger

Neu-Ulm University of Applied Sciences

February 14, 2026

Assignment

You portray a leader and select a specific leadership situation, then analyze that situation through two different theoretical lenses to show how these complement each other in a 12-minute presentation followed by a 10-minute discussion led by a randomly drawn challenger.

The core idea

One situation.
Two lenses.
Richer understanding.

Dual-lens analysis

  • Each theory is precisely introduced — key constructs, mechanisms, and boundary conditions, not just a label.
  • Each theory is applied analytically — explaining why the leader behaved as they did and what followed, not merely describing what happened using theoretical vocabulary.
  • The analysis reveals what each lens captures and what it misses — e.g., “Social capital theory explains how the leader mobilized support, but SDT explains why the team was intrinsically motivated to follow.”
  • The two lenses complement or productively tension each other — either they illuminate different facets of the same situation, or they offer competing explanations that sharpen the analysis.
  • The conclusions are grounded in the combined analysis — not generic leadership advice, but specific insights that only emerge from the dual-lens approach.

Time allocation

  • Leader & situation portrait ~3 min
  • Theory A — brief introduction & application ~3.5 min
  • Theory B — brief introduction & application ~3.5 min
  • Integration & conclusions ~2 min

Leaders

To avoid duplication, you must propose a shortlist of two to three leaders you would like to portray. You will then be assigned to a leader from your shortlist.

Theories

At least one theory must stem from the course. The following additional theories might be helpful as a second lens:

  • Cognitive Dissonance Theory
  • Contingency Theory
  • Functional Leadership Theory
  • Job Demands-Resources Theory
  • (Digital) Mindset
  • Psychological Safety
  • Self-Determination Theory
  • Social Cognitive Theory
  • Social Identity Theory
  • Social Judgement Theory
  • Socio-Analytic Theory
  • Shared Mental Models
  • Stakeholder Salience Theory

Challenger role

After each presentation, a challenger is drawn at random who leads a 7-minute critical discussion demonstrating real-time analytical thinking.

Responsibilities

The challenger is randomly drawn immediately after the presentation ends and leads the 10-minute discussion.

The challenger should address at least two of the following dimensions:

  • Challenge an assumption: identify an assumption in the theoretical analysis and question its validity.
  • Propose an alternative lens: suggest a third theoretical perspective that might explain the situation differently — and why it matters.
  • Surface a tension: identify a contradiction or unresolved tension between the two theoretical lenses that the presenter did not address.
  • Test the conclusions: examine whether the conclusions follow logically from the analysis — or whether alternative conclusions are equally plausible.
  • Extend the analysis: propose how the dual-lens analysis might apply to a different situation or leader.

How to prepare

You cannot prepare for a specific presentation — but you can prepare the skill:

  • Know the theories from the course well enough to spot gaps and propose alternatives spontaneously.
  • Practice the five critique dimensions during every presentation — take notes as if you will be called.
  • Build your latticework: the more mental models you command, the faster you can generate alternative lenses on the spot.

Submission

All students need to submit the required documents at the same time.

  • Upload your presentation slides (.pptx) via Moodle until the deadline.
  • Use following naming scheme: DL_ST26_Surname-Name
  • You will present the slides uploaded to Moodle (no late updates).
  • For the deadline and the presentation dates, please see the schedule.

The presentation slots will be announced shortly after the submission. Challenger assignments are not announced in advance — they are drawn at random after each presentation.

Grading

Presentation (70%)

An excellent presentation has the following characteristics:

  • The leadership situation is concrete, well-documented, and comprehensible without prior knowledge of the person. (Situation portrait)
  • Both theories are precisely introduced — key constructs and mechanisms are explained based on scientific literature, not just named. (Theoretical precision)
  • Both theories are applied to explain why the leader behaved as they did and what followed — the analysis goes beyond description. (Analytical depth)
  • The analysis reveals what each lens captures and misses, and shows how combining both produces richer understanding. (Integration)
  • Insights flow logically from the dual-lens analysis and are specific, not generic. (Conclusions)
  • The presenter communicates confidently, uses visual aids effectively, engages the audience, and stays within time (11–13 min). (Delivery)

Challenger (30%)

An excellent challenger contribution has the following characteristics:

  • The critique demonstrates active listening and identifies genuine gaps, tensions, or alternative interpretations on the spot. (Analytical engagement)
  • Questions and challenges reference specific theoretical constructs — not just general opinions or surface-level observations. (Theoretical grounding)
  • The challenger proposes a plausible alternative or complementary theoretical lens that the presenter did not consider. (Alternative perspective)
  • The discussion is conducted respectfully and rigorously, balancing own questions with opening space for the audience. (Discussion leadership)

Formal requirements

Compliance with formal requirements and good scientific practice are critical pass criteria for all parts, means that in case of non-compliance the exam is automatically failed (e.g., plagiarism, even light forms).

A note on grades

Grade Meaning
1 — very good A truly outstanding achievement that (not only) shows no deficiencies in the criteria mentioned, but also gives both the supervisor and external assessors an excellent impression.
2 — good Work that exceeds the average requirements/performance and is easily recognizable and presentable to the outside world as a “good performance”.
Note 2.5 is the average of passed assessments, i.e., an “average performance”
3 — satisfactory A performance that achieves the desired goal “to a satisfactory extent”; however, deficiencies can be identified here and there.
4 — sufficient A performance that “still adequately satisfies” the requirements, but deviates from the expectations placed on it in several ways.
5 — not sufficient A performance that does not meet several of the criteria mentioned.

Q&A